A team of researchers discovers that a big chunk of geostationary satellite data flowing over North America is unencrypted, ...
They assumed that no one was ever going to check and scan all these satellites and see what was out there. That was their ...
Researchers spent the past year alerting affected organizations, including T-Mobile and AT&T, but warn that large amounts of ...
A new study by researchers at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), and the University of Maryland (UMD) has ...
Even more surprisingly, the researchers didn’t need any fancy spy gear to collect this data. Their setup used only ...
Calls, texts and information from military and corporate accounts were exposed and unencrypted, according to a report. T-Mobile has since fixed the problem, but others have not.
A study reveals that some T-Mobile and even military data was sent unencrypted via satellites, exposing it to anyone with the right gear.
Non-geostationary orbiting satellite networks are routinely beaming their signals in areas reserved for geostationary satellites, and into each other’s signal ...
For decades, the military has relied on large, multi-ton satellites for global communications from geostationary orbit (GEO), a prime location 35,000 kilometers above Earth that provides unique ...
US researchers found it surprisingly easy to access private text messages and military data using homemade satellite scans ...
Aerospace startup company K2 Space will team up with SpaceX to deploy a small number of K2 satellites into multiple levels of ...
Satellite signals carrying unencrypted calls, texts and information from military and corporate accounts were found to be open to eavesdropping.