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In terms of radio transmission, three major issues seem to arise for various sensitive transmissions:

  1. Others do not gain access to the content of the message
  2. Others cannot determine the location of the sender
  3. Others cannot block (jam) message channels
  4. Others do not know a message is being sent at all

In terms of amateur radio and non-amateur radio in different bands (if this is applicable) and different protocols/specifications (if this is applicable), how well does frequency hopping (without encryption) address each of these issues both in terms of avoiding the accidental observer, deliberate amateur (not as in amateur radio but amateur as in non-professional) observer, and determined professional government/authority observer.

BONUS: How well does frequency hopping work in these matters when combined with encryption?

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  • $\begingroup$ Cell phones seem reasonably secure. Like a mechanical lock, human ingenuity & effort can prevail if enough effort is assigned to it. $\endgroup$ Aug 16, 2015 at 16:03
  • $\begingroup$ @Optionparty, cell phones are not secure. $\endgroup$
    – user5147
    Aug 16, 2015 at 23:43
  • $\begingroup$ Nothing is totally secure forever, only reasonably secure for a while. The military combines two forms of Spread Spectrum. it must be good enough. $\endgroup$ Aug 17, 2015 at 0:28
  • $\begingroup$ What prevents someone from determining the sender's location? What's not possible is to locate the receiver (unless he is also transmitting) $\endgroup$
    – David Hoelzer
    Aug 17, 2015 at 2:53

4 Answers 4

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  1. Others do not gain access to the content of the message

In the US amateur radio service, transmitting “messages encoded for the purpose of obscuring their meaning” is prohibited by §97.113 and specifically for spread-spectrum (SS) by §97.311. I would imagine other jurisdictions have similar rules which prohibit such transmissions and/or require that hopping patterns etc. be published.

I'll leave the detailed question of whether it is useful for this purpose when legal to others who are more familiar with the technical aspects of spread-spectrum modulation. Some remarks from general principle follow.

  1. Others cannot determine the location of the sender

No method can give you this as an absolute guarantee. Someone can always take a wide-band receiver and a directional antenna and look for where the received power is higher. All that spread-spectrum gets you here is requiring the receiver to have a wider bandwidth, therefore being unable to filter out unrelated signals from other radiators, making it harder to find the transmitter at a longer distance.

  1. Others cannot block message channels

Spread-spectrum techniques increase the power requirements of jamming, because the jammer must decrease the SNR sufficiently across the entire bandwidth and not just a narrow band.

  1. Others do not know a message is being sent at all

This falls into the same category as point 2; as you move away from the transmitter, a spread-spectrum transmission will apparently disappear into the noise floor sooner, but if you are close enough a transmission is obvious no matter what the frequency.


For the “accidental observer” as you put it, not attempting to decode spread-spectrum transmissions, they will receive the SS transmission as a (possibly imperceptible) increase in the noise floor. Thus, spread-spectrum signals are indeed unlikely to be accidentally received (or interfered with).

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks, I'll wait a few days to allow for other answers and if none are written with more technical detail on the first point as you mentioned I'll accept this one. $\endgroup$
    – J-S
    Aug 16, 2015 at 22:28
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Frequency hopping is more typically considered an ECCM measure. That is to say that a transciever that continuously cycles frequencies in accordance with some "hop set" is more difficult to jam than a single-channel radio system. In and of itself, it doesn't constitute proper encryption of your signal -- you are still transmitting data in plain text. It would make it more difficult for unmatched hardware to receive your signal in its entirety, but considering the narrow bands of spectrum you're allowed to operate on with an amateur license I'd be extremely concerned about inadvertently causing interference as your radio hops across the spectrum.

I've only really seen freqhop implemented on the VHF spectrum as an ECCM measure, and other matched radios designed to talk on that net need carefully matched radio time (a time drift of as little as a second would cause a radio to fall out of net).

It would not obscure that you're sending a signal at all -- on the contrary, a frequency hopping radio would, to me, be quite notable and draw my attention. If your objective is to prevent your signal from being received by third party stations, the tried and true solution is to use a directional antenna. This also wouldn't run afoul of any FCC regulations and would actually help mitigate interference, in my opinion.

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  • $\begingroup$ As a further clarification to the first paragraph, what I'm saying when I mention the bandwidth limitations is that you would have a limited hopset size and, therefore, frequency hopping would have limited usefulness. $\endgroup$ Aug 20, 2015 at 16:16
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    $\begingroup$ It's better to edit further clarifications into your answer rather than using comments. $\endgroup$
    – Kevin Reid AG6YO
    Aug 21, 2015 at 0:22
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I am not an expert. However, I am aware of Mike Ossmann's work on sniffing Bluetooth and Mike Ryan's work on sniffing Bluetooth Smart.

In the case of those two technologies:

Others do not gain access to the content of the message

False. Others may well be able to gain access to the content of the message, unless the message is encrypted with a strong cipher and a strong key that remains unknown to the attacker.

Others cannot determine the location of the sender

See answer by Kevin Reid AG6YO.

Others cannot block message channels

See answer by Kevin Reid AG6YO.

Others do not know a message is being sent at all

False. Certainly, if one can access the content of the message, that's a pretty good indicator that a message was sent!

In the general case, the answer to those questions is likely to depend on factors such as:

  • protocol used;
  • transmit power;
  • bandwidth utilisation;
  • directionality of source;
  • background noise profile and level;
  • etc.
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Just to try a contradictory answer: If each "hop" is well below the RF noise floor at your location, both in RF power, bandwidth, and duration, even for directional antenna pointed at you from outside your secure zone, and the time and frequency of all the hops are well separated and known only to the sender and receiver (such as via a long one-time pad), and the data rate is low enough such that information can be determined to exist and thus received (due to a sufficiently/highly redundant encoding scheme) only after a period much longer than the attention span of anyone DF-ing you, then (4) and (2) can be met, implying (1) as well, but (3) can still be violated by anyone raising the entire RF noise floor above what Shannon's law allows for your chosen low data rate. Which could be a neighbor turning on their vacuum cleaner and/or old microwave oven.

However, the long one-time pad and custom encoding scheme is essentially equivalent to encryption.

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