On 1/12/19, jim bell <jdb10987@yahoo.com> wrote:
"denial of service attacks"?
The concept is that the RF as roughly described in whatever paper cannot be jammed or DOS'd... your RF would appear as noise to all but those holding the RF spectrum noise key, so the only way to jam it, if you even knew it was in use in the first place (say by noting an overall spectrum power bump) would be to raise the noise floor by emitting... you guessed it, random noise... which would wipe out the S/N dB's you need for your own comms be they traditional AM / FM / etc, or this keyed noise tech. So you'd end up in a mutually assured destruction, essentially who can throw more power in the air. You'd probably be able to get more local power up, hop by hop, than a wide area adversary tying to blanket you, so you'd win. You need the RF noise key to cipher the RF, so the underlying data packets are always secure and unaffected by the above. Data would be affected by nodes that are involved in the data layer, before it gets pushed up to or down from RF. That's a trusted evil maid problem and thus out of scope.