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Comments for Hackaday

AI The Truly Environmentally Friendly Way News Sites Are Blocking Internet Archive Over AI Scraping Fears How The 2020s Chip Crisis Led To A Buggy Saleae Analyzer In 2026 Evidence For Water Vapor Plumes On Europa Vanishes In Re-Analysis Mechanical Stability For Your Coils 3D Printed Hose Sprayer Sets Phasers To Suds The Merits Of Comment-Driven Development As Counterweight To TDD Building A Desktop Catalytic Cracker Process 4 Billion Pixels Per Second From 16 DIY Cameras For The Best V-Tubing Rig Ever An Unlikely Host For An 8080 Emulator Using Brand New NiMH Cells After Sitting 12 Years Unused Investigating The S3 Virge’s Reputation As A 3D Decelerator Card As It Turns Out, There’s More Than One Cassette Mechanism Being Made After All Using Windows 11 On An LGA 775 PC With AGP Videocard An Ethernet WiFi Router on a Pi Pico 2W This Week In Security: Messing With AI, 7Zip And Notepad++ Vulnerabilities, HTTP2 Bomb, And More Using Electrolysis For More Than Just Generating Hydrogen Vintage Turntable Gets Brain Transplant And Home Assistant Integration Connecting Your Car To Home Assistant Microsoft Claims 20 Second Qubits If You Want To Hack Me, Come In Through The Speaker Ways To Embed Magnets In 3D Prints And Not Ruin Printers An RGB Keyboard For Your Hackaday Communicator Badge Ask Hackaday: How Do You Feel About Electronic Shelf Labels? 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Spy Tech: The GPS Numbers Station
Nick · 2026-06-28 · via Comments for Hackaday

We’ve talked before about number stations — mysterious shortwave transmitters repeating numbers, presumably for clandestine purposes. But, of course, the mere fact that they are unusual makes them stand out. The best place to hide something is in plain sight. In the old days, a broadcaster might slip a fake news story in mentioning a name that has a secret meaning, for example. But according to [Steven Murdoch], the United States has an even more obvious hiding place for a numbers station: inside GPS.

Every L1 C/A navigation message is a 176-bit field known by the affectionate moniker: Subframe 4, Page 17. The GPS specification says it is for “special messages.” No one has disclosed what those messages might be.

[Murdoch] at University College London analyzed over 12 million GPS packets from 2007 to 2026, trying to understand what was in this field. You might think 176 bits isn’t much, and you are right. But the L1 C/A signal carries 50 bits per second, and each frame is 1,500 bits. As [Murdoch] points out: “every bit must earn its place.” Each subframe is 300 bits, so this mysterious signal is 12% of the subframe. It must be important to someone.

Even if you don’t find spy stuff that interesting, the techniques used to sift through 19 years of data using Python, Julia, and other tools are worth reading about. The source code is available, too.

In 2023, the field has, at least sometimes, changed format. However, the best guess is that the field is sending cryptographic rekeying to other systems.

Of course, the truth could be different, but you have to admit, hiding spy messages in the GPS stream is truly hiding in plain sight. Of course, there are still contemporary traditional number stations out there, too.

Read more from this series:
SpyTech