Day 4: The Power and Risks of Location Technology PDF
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Uploaded by CommendableMorningGlory3698
Arab Open University
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Summary
This document summarizes the key points of Day 4, focusing on the power and risks of location technology, particularly geospatial information and GNSS systems. It also discusses user requirements and the evolving role of national geospatial agencies.
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18/09/2024 Day 4: The power and risks of location D...
18/09/2024 Day 4: The power and risks of location Day 4: The power and technology risks of location The power to deceive using geospatial information technology GNSS – its value to a nation and to threat actors Importance of understanding user requirements The changing nature of national geospatial agencies and the need to keep developing 4.9: Day 4 summary and final questions 1 2 1 2 The power to deceive using GNSS – its value to a nation and to threat actors geospatial information GNSS is the key provider of position, navigation and time. It looks good, it must be right. GNSS is a driver for national economies. Deliberately or inadvertent deception GNSS is neutral, it’s also used by the ‘threat actors’. Geospatial sector standards, quality control and security GNSS denial – jamming and spoofing. Ability to trust government data Do governments recognise this value and have they considered requires accessibility whether there are risks of losing it? Apps and machines as well as human interpretation Authoritative data helps prevent the wrong answers when machines/apps integrate data from many sources 3 4 3 4 18/09/2024 Importance of user requirements The changing nature of national geospatial Value lies in the use of data to solve problems. agencies User requirements are a means to understand the problem and how integrating data and technologies can help solve it. National geospatial agencies remain vital to a nation but need to adapt to the changing geospatial ecosystem. Two-way discussion; geospatial organisations understand the There is not one answer, but: potential, the users understand the problem. Focus remains on users and national priorities. Users are increasingly machines and applications, not just people. Data integration and agency collaboration is essential part of this. It is difficult to understand secondary and tertiary uses further along Authoritative and trusted data are increasingly important in an the supply chain. interconnected age. Geospatial Security can be part of this discussion, especially for The balance between benefits and security risks continues to evolve. security-focused users. 5 6 5 6 Day 4: final questions Day 4: The power and risks of location technology 7 7