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Zak Kassas Wins Best Paper Presentation Award, August 2013

Austin, TX—Zak Kassas won the best paper presentation award in the Estimation Session of the AIAA Guidance Navigation and Control (GNC) conference, 2012 for his paper entitled “Observability Analysis of Opportunistic Navigation with Pseudorange Measurements“. The awards were announced during the 2013 GNC conference. Zak’s research focuses on devising novel techniques for opportunistic and collaborative navigation.

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MIT Technology Review: “Spoofers” Use Fake GPS Signals to Knock a Yacht Off Course, August 2013

“University of Texas researchers recently tricked the navigation system of an $80 million yacht and sent the ship off course in an experiment that showed how any device with civilian GPS technology is vulnerable to a practice called spoofing. Led by GPS expert Todd Humphreys, the researchers used a handheld device they built for about

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NHPR: ‘GPS Spoofing’ Is More Dangerous Than It Sounds, August 2013

“With all great innovations comes the potential for mischief. With so much of our social, commercial, and government infrastructure already online, it’s highly likely that we’ve all been targeted by cyber-attacks, even if we haven’t directly felt their results. Cars, computer cams, ATMs, databases, and power grids can be hacked.  In a recent high profile

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PBS NewsHour: Researchers Steer Off Course to Show Potential Power of ‘GPS Spoofing’, August 2013

“In June, a 213-foot luxury yacht sailed off the southern coast of Italy, when, suddenly, it veered off course. But this was no sinister act worthy of a spy flick. Instead, a team of researchers from the University of Texas at Austin had deliberately coerced the $80 million vessel from its track, without physically taking

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Slate: Superyacht Owner Lets College Kids Hack and Hijack $80 Million Ship in Name of Science, August 2013

“It must be pretty cool to be one of Todd Humphreys’ engineering students at the University of Texas at Austin. Last year, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security dared them to hack into a drone. (Which they did.) And this year, Humphreys and his students went to the Mediterranean to see if they could hijack an $80

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InsideGNSS: GPS Spoofing Experiment Knocks Ship off Course, July 2013

“In a startling experiment a research team from the University of Texas successfully spoofed a ship’s GPS-based navigation system sending the 213-foot yacht hundreds of yards off course — without raising alarms or triggering a hint of the course change on the onboard monitors. Led by assistant professor Todd Humphreys, the group used equipment what

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NBC: Cheap GPS trick sends $80 million superyacht off course, July 2013

“A small team of researchers from the University of Texas at Austin recently tricked a 213-foot superyacht off its course using a custom-made GPS device, rendering the $80 million vessel’s electronic maps and charts useless. “People have come to trust their electronic chart displays,” Todd Humphreys, team leader and assistant professor at UT’s Cockrell School

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Ars Technica: Professor fools $80M superyacht’s GPS receiver on the high seas, July 2013

“One of the world’s foremost academic experts in GPS spoofing—University of Texas assistant professor Todd Humphreys—released a short video on Monday showing how he and his students deceived the GPS equipment aboard an expensive superyacht. Humphreys conducted the test in the Ionian Sea in late June 2013 and early July 2013 with the full consent of the “White

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UT Aerospace: Humphreys Research Group Successfully Spoofs an $80 million Yacht at Sea, July 2013

This summer, a radio navigation research team from The University of Texas at Austin set out to discover whether they could subtly coerce a 213-foot yacht off its course, using a custom-made GPS device. Led by assistant professor Todd Humphreys of the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics at the Cockrell School of Engineering, the team

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