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#141
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If I want to learn how to interface with some garmin
gps from my pc, I can google for the specification of the garmin interace and slap together some C code to upload a trace or otherwise fiddle with my logger unit. And I can do the same by opening an approved FR and fiddling with the GPS streams from the engine, and I can do that at home without an OO watching and get a world record. Actually, that is a false assumption. The "Technical Specification" for IGC Approved FR specifically requires that any "interference" (such as opening the box or electronically fiddling with the unit) will activate an internal device that erases the Digital Security code of the box, which is unique to each FR serial#. So all traces generated during or after the "interference" will not validate. Their security signature will be invalid, as any IGC reading program will say. If you try to manually edit that file, it will generate yet another inconsistency in the signature. The only way to get a "violated" FR back to "secure" mode is to send it back to the manufacturer, which has to insert a new, one-time digital security code that is specific to that particular unit's serial #, assigned by the IGC. In other words, if you open your FR, the only way you will get it to generate a secure (valid) tracklog is by involving the manufacturer and the IGC. I don't think this is something you can work around at home, no matter how much of an electronic genious you are. |
#142
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Arbr64 wrote:
In other words, if you open your FR, the only way you will get it to generate a secure (valid) tracklog is by involving the manufacturer and the IGC. I don't think this is something you can work around at home, no matter how much of an electronic genious you are. Please read Mike Borgelt's post about this issue. /Janos |
#143
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Jamie Denton wrote:
Your silver, as it stands at the moment, says to an insurance company that, with an amount of certainty, that you have a certain level of competence neccesary for the silver badge, introducing COTS loggers for the silvers cannot help but reduce that level of certainty, as cannot be avoided that it is easier to hack these devices (due to there being easier ways to manipulate files these devices, I'm not saying current loggers are immune to hacking, but COTS systems certainly lower the bar). The security system surrounding badges isn't only the log file but the entire set of circumstances surrounding the flight. That's why the OO is still an integral part of the system despite all the IGC's efforts to dehumanise it. It's unrealistic to try to build a system based solely on "impregnable" technology as the IGC seems to have set out to do. Here's how silly it is. The level of security around the logbooks and licence required to get a pilot's job at an airline is orders of magnitude less than for the documentation required to claim a Silver Badge! The basis for the logbook and licence security (and it's not perfect, it's adequate) is the web of checkable human contacts defined in those documents. No sealed loggers are involved. The OO is the link with a similar human web for the badge system and, used properly, would provide adequate surety that the flight is genuine while allowing significantly less secure - and much cheaper - technology to be used. Perfection in human affairs is unattainable. Adequate security is all you can usefully aim for. Excessive security is very wasteful and expensive as the soaring community now knows. Reducing excessive to adequate would be a win for the entire gliding community. Hypothetically, taken to it's extreme, if silver paperwork became a self declaration job, involving you to simply self declare you completed the task, with no OO or logger evidence, we would not expect an insurance company to take it seriously as a measure of competance, as there is no worthwhile evidence. Nobody suggested that. Adequate security doesn't mean no security. If we allow COTS units, we lower the standard of proof neccesary for badges, we devalue the Silver badge etc in the eyes of the insurance companies... I'd be careful before lowering the bar... few people may cheat, but insurance companies don't always act rationally.... Yes they do. They're going to set their premiums where they can make a profit based on claims experience. Just like they do now. Graeme Cant |
#144
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Paul Repacholi wrote:
... But you don't have to fake the file, just fake the signals into the FAI logger and use a pressure chamber. Some one should submit a `suitable' claim file, flown at 100K' ![]() all the security intact. Logging raw satelite data and carrier phase would be a bit more secure, it could be post proscessed when the prescision ephemeris data is available a few days later. It would be REALLY hard to predict that! ... Todd Pattist wrote: ... He doesn't have to fake it. When you buy an approved FR, it comes with software and hardware right inside the FR that will create the digital signature he needs. All the fancy cryptography we use is based on keeping the secret key a secret, but the way we use it, we have to put the secret key and the software and hardware that use that key to create the digital signature inside the box the pilot owns. The security boils down to a switch inside a box closed with some screws. ... But in these both cases we are no more at the level of what a 12 years old boy can do with his home computer. |
#145
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Never has so much been written by so many about so little.
Allan "Graeme Cant" wrote in message ... Jamie Denton wrote: Your silver, as it stands at the moment, says to an insurance company that, with an amount of certainty, that you have a certain level of competence neccesary for the silver badge, introducing COTS loggers for the silvers cannot help but reduce that level of certainty, as cannot be avoided that it is easier to hack these devices (due to there being easier ways to manipulate files these devices, I'm not saying current loggers are immune to hacking, but COTS systems certainly lower Snip |
#146
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Martin Gregorie wrote:
On Wed, 09 Jun 2004 13:22:00 +0200, Janos Bauer How does it devalue the Silver C? It's just another way of documenting it... Sure, if there's a proper paper trail - by that I mean with some sort of approved FR and the paper work inspected, checked and signed off by an OO then no problem. COTS is OK if they get type approval and/or the IGC publish an FR requirements spec and mandate that the pilot must demonstrate that his FR can match or exceed that spec. I think a lot of us think that the O/O looking at the trace immediately after the flight is really the key. It's hard to fake a trace with the takeoff and release happening at exactly the time and place the towpilot observed, and then modifying it in flight. A good O/O should be able to notice such discrepencies... Just my opinion, but I think the O/O is the real key, not the logger security... -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
#147
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Mark James Boyd wrote:
I think a lot of us think that the O/O looking at the trace immediately after the flight is really the key. It's hard to fake a trace with the takeoff and release happening at exactly the time and place the towpilot observed, and then modifying it in flight. A good O/O should be able to notice such discrepencies... Just my opinion, but I think the O/O is the real key, not the logger security... How about a distance flight that ends at a different airfield? It might be hours - or the next day - before the OO can examine the trace. For these kinds of flights, should the COTs be sealed in a box, or are you assuming it already is? -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#148
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Unrelated to security, but still on the thread.
Has anybody bothered to read Annex B, the section on altitude measurement. It's a hoot. It's not really rules so much as a combination white paper/position paper. But I digress... In the same section, we have a statement that one can use "Optical Measurement from the Ground" (ie. the good old fashioned start gate) and Radar Ranging (!) if "accurate enough for the purpose" (with the word "accurate" not defined) to validate start height followed by a section with a long discourse on how GPS Altitude isn't suitably accurate for measurement. If that doesn't give everyone some indication of what a strange mix the IGC has created in terms of standards and accuracy acceptability, I don't know what does. Erik Mann "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message news:40cd4e88$1@darkstar... Martin Gregorie wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2004 13:22:00 +0200, Janos Bauer How does it devalue the Silver C? It's just another way of documenting it... Sure, if there's a proper paper trail - by that I mean with some sort of approved FR and the paper work inspected, checked and signed off by an OO then no problem. COTS is OK if they get type approval and/or the IGC publish an FR requirements spec and mandate that the pilot must demonstrate that his FR can match or exceed that spec. I think a lot of us think that the O/O looking at the trace immediately after the flight is really the key. It's hard to fake a trace with the takeoff and release happening at exactly the time and place the towpilot observed, and then modifying it in flight. A good O/O should be able to notice such discrepencies... Just my opinion, but I think the O/O is the real key, not the logger security... -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
#149
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Forgot the link:
http://www.fai.org/sporting_code/sc3b.pdf "Papa3" wrote in message ink.net... Unrelated to security, but still on the thread. Has anybody bothered to read Annex B, the section on altitude measurement. It's a hoot. It's not really rules so much as a combination white paper/position paper. But I digress... In the same section, we have a statement that one can use "Optical Measurement from the Ground" (ie. the good old fashioned start gate) and Radar Ranging (!) if "accurate enough for the purpose" (with the word "accurate" not defined) to validate start height followed by a section with a long discourse on how GPS Altitude isn't suitably accurate for measurement. If that doesn't give everyone some indication of what a strange mix the IGC has created in terms of standards and accuracy acceptability, I don't know what does. Erik Mann "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message news:40cd4e88$1@darkstar... Martin Gregorie wrote: On Wed, 09 Jun 2004 13:22:00 +0200, Janos Bauer How does it devalue the Silver C? It's just another way of documenting it... Sure, if there's a proper paper trail - by that I mean with some sort of approved FR and the paper work inspected, checked and signed off by an OO then no problem. COTS is OK if they get type approval and/or the IGC publish an FR requirements spec and mandate that the pilot must demonstrate that his FR can match or exceed that spec. I think a lot of us think that the O/O looking at the trace immediately after the flight is really the key. It's hard to fake a trace with the takeoff and release happening at exactly the time and place the towpilot observed, and then modifying it in flight. A good O/O should be able to notice such discrepencies... Just my opinion, but I think the O/O is the real key, not the logger security... -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
#150
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Pete Brown wrote
Let's keep a bit of perspective. These badges are primarily a record of personal achievement, very little more. Well, not quite. For one thing, they are used as a prerequisite for entering contests. For another, lots of people seem determined to prevent 'dilution' of the accomplishment, for whatever reason. Some mention insurance, but I've never had an insurer inquire about my badges. I don't have a Silver badge. I suppose that had I been more concerned with documenting rather than flying I might. I didn't own a logger, or a barograph for that matter, but my club had barographs and I'm certain that had I asked, I could have borrowed one. I know, because I remember seeing a pilot trying to get a barograph to work and filling in paperwork while I was getting ready to make a flight. It didn't look like fun. See, that's what flying is about for me - having fun. I flew to a nearby (60 km) field, but that didn't seem like much of a challenge. At that point I was glad I hadn't bothered with a barograph, because I decided to turn around and come home. I knew there was a way to make the flight count anyway, with a turnpoint camera and a barograph, but the last time someone tried to explain how that worked to me, my eyes glazed over. I guess I wasn't up to the challenge. Getting home, fighting a 30kt headwind in a metal ship, almost landing out - THAT was a challenge. I'm really glad I made that flight - it taught me things about soaring that no book can teach. I wrote about that flight for this newsgroup when it happened. Soon thereafter, I heard there was going to be a local contest. I knew I had no chance of winning, but I considered entering anyway, just for the experience. I was thinking about getting my glider instructor rating, and I felt that flying in a contest was something I ought to experience. Certainly participating in a skydiving competition is required to become a skydiving instructor, and I always thought the requirement was a good one. Turned out I needed a Silver badge. It was kind of amusing, because another pilot was dead set on entering the contest. Like me, he had already flown a qualifying flight, and unlike me he actually attempted to document it - but something had gone wrong with the documentation and he needed to redo it. The day was marginal, but he declared the flight, saying that he would either get his Silver that day or land out. He landed out. I believe he eventually got the SSA to accept his original documentation and entered the contest. He was persistent. I guess I wasn't. I never did enter a contest. I eventually got my glider instructor rating and taught some. I still fly a great deal, but mostly in power. Less hassle, more fun. I still teach too, but also mostly in power. I just finished teaching a glider pilot to fly instruments. He also doesn't have a Silver badge, even though he has made more than one qualifying flight. He doesn't fly gliders anymore either. But hey, I'm sure keeping guys like us out is a small price to pay for maintaining the integrity of the badge system. After all, if we were truly serious, we would have overcome the obstacles. I'm sure soaring is better off without us. Michael |
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