
Galileo authentication to make falsifying satellite signals more difficult
Researchers from the Department of Electrical Engineering at KU Leuven (University of Leuven, Belgium) have developed a way of differentiating Galileo – they have designed authentication features that will make it even more difficult to send out false Galileo signals.
Navigation systems based on satellites suffer when hackers send out signals of their own that mask out the real ones. As the authentic signals are blocked, the position information for the navigation system is no longer correct.
Professor Vincent Rijmen and doctoral student Tomer Ashur from the Department of Electrical Engineering (ESAT) at KU Leuven have now advised the European Commission on ways to make Galileo signals more difficult to falsify. Their authentication method involves electronic signatures, similar to methods used for online banking.
To avoid delaying the launch of Galileo the researchers could only use the remaining ‘bits’ in the signals for authentication purposes. “This is why we support the TESLA method for electronic signatures,” Professor Rijmen explains. “TESLA signatures fit into 100 bits. They quickly expire, but this is not a disadvantage in the case of satellite navigation because the location is authenticated every 30 seconds or less anyway.”
The method still needs to be tested and validated before it can be made available to the general public. “The authentication service is scheduled to become publicly available on a number of Galileo satellites in 2018,” according to Professor Rijmen. “By 2020 the method will be fully operational. To use it, however, you will need a special receiver for Galileo signals that can also verify the electronic signatures. These receivers are currently in development.”

