• Vakbrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    9 months ago

    From the low power models I’ve seen (which are still very much illegal, same as the most powerful ones) only work between 5 to 10 feet at the very most.

    It’s like when the companies place trackers in cars, we have to assume they have the best intentions in mind (it is definitely for the customers security right?!)

    But if we, the customers, block them from tracking us by jamming the GPS signal, they assume we have the worst intentions in mind (surely we are dirty criminals right?!)

    This is why I said it “feels” wrong.

    • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      It doesn’t work like that.

      They broadcast a powerful radio signal on the GPS frequency. You might have to be within 10 feet for it to completely drown out the real GPS frequency, but the waves don’t stop they just spread out and get “thinner” with distance. If it completely blocks the signal at 10 feet, it will severely reduce accuracy further out than that. Likely everyone within line of sight of your car will lose accuracy on their GPS.

      And that would include airplanes, line of sight is a really long distance up above your car. Airplanes use GPS for critical functions including making sure they don’t crash into the ground when they’re flying through clouds / rain / fog so you could potentially cause serious problems. Most likely force the airplane to land in a different city — because they will not land if their altitude equipment isn’t working… yes they have other ways of measuring altitude but all of them are unreliable, which is why they have GPS. You’re taking away one layer of their patchwork system of landing safely and if too many layers are gone then they abandon the landing and fly elsewhere - happened to a friend of mine recently, turned a quick 2 hour flight home into an 18 hour trip.