A radio station that no one claims to run (2017)(bbc.com)
bbc.com
A radio station that no one claims to run (2017)
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20170801-the-ghostly-radio-station-that-no-one-claims-to-run
16 comments
According to the Wikipedia article some urban explorers found this logbook from one of its previous transmission sites.
http://www.numbers-stations.com/media/sample-uvb76-logbook.p...
http://www.numbers-stations.com/media/sample-uvb76-logbook.p...
Because the article never mentions it, many people probably know this as "UVB-76".
More info:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UVB-76
https://www.sigidwiki.com/wiki/The_Buzzer_(ZhUOZ_MDZhB_UZB76...
More info:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UVB-76
https://www.sigidwiki.com/wiki/The_Buzzer_(ZhUOZ_MDZhB_UZB76...
The second link leads to http://priyom.org/military-stations/russia/message-format, which reveals a fairly simple format that relies on one-time pads. Each military unit has envelopes with unique word grids, e.g. https://i.imgur.com/ItpKnNy.png The radio station transmits messages as envelope identifiers and line/column numbers of those grids, and recipients piece them together.
Simple and impossible to break unless envelope contents leak. Given how rarely the system is used, it probably serves as a low-tech backup for high-tech radio systems.
Simple and impossible to break unless envelope contents leak. Given how rarely the system is used, it probably serves as a low-tech backup for high-tech radio systems.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Conet_Project is a great compliation of numbers station samples
Here's a BBC radio documentary from 2005 on the Lincolnshire Poacher
https://youtu.be/Wvr6o7fBcTY
https://youtu.be/Wvr6o7fBcTY
Discussed at the time: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14988362
[deleted]
Ha-ha I had to check whether this was the place where I served in 87-88. No, my unit work location was about 10 miles south along the same road. Also a bunch truck based radio stations, buildings, huge antenna fields, etc. We did radio surveillance on NATO countries in northern Europe, Unit 75752. Our transmitters were yet a few miles south of that location (you normally want to separate the transmitting and receiving as far as practical).
Any theory what this one might’ve been?
Number Stations (and similar like the station described in the article here) have a place in my heart. One of the items on my "hobby projects list" is to make a small version of one -- nothing the FCC would knock on my door about, clearly -- since the topic fascinates me so.
COMMAND 135 ISSUED
If that command really were used as the article suggests then you'd think it would be followed by a bunch of other sigint derived from an increase in activity by the units that received the command.
Maybe that is how they arrived at the suggested of the command? The article is short on attributions for these claims though.
deadman snitch.
Another fascinating fact is the system sometimes transmits cleartext messages! The system allows two types of messages to be sent. The first type is fully encrypted normal messages, but one can also send "chat" messages, which allows the operators of two systems to communicate about their working schedule, system maintenance, etc, and they are unencrypted plaintext, which revealed a lot of about the internal of this system. Opsec failure? They should really just use a hardcoded symmetric key for this purpose...
Network Structure:
* The North Korean diplomatic shortwave network follows a forwarding tree structure, as they limit contacts between their stations to hops of usually no more than 5000 kilometers. Pyongyang sits at the root at the tree structure, as ultimate origin or recipient of all messages between it and embassies. Messages from Pyongyang are transmitted and relayed by North Korean embassies across the world, hop by hop along each branch of the distribution tree, until they are received by their final recipients. Messages from embassies are relayed and forwarded back to Pyongyang in the reverse way.
http://priyom.org/diplomatic-stations/north-korea/network
Protocol:
* North Korean diplomatic communications utilize a proprietary ARQ modem of unknown name, unofficially known as DPRK-ARQ. The modem is based on BFSK bursts transmitted in lower sideband mode. There are two possible waveforms: 600Bd/600Hz as the default, and 1200Bd/600Hz as an option.
A complete protocol analysis is given by: http://priyom.org/diplomatic-stations/north-korea/dprk-arq-p...
Message Format:
http://priyom.org/diplomatic-stations/north-korea/message-fo...