Civil GPS accuracy boosted
President Clinton on Monday delivered on a promise to improve the accuracy of the Global Positioning System to civil users
President Clinton on Monday delivered on a 4-year-old promise to improve
the accuracy of the Global Positioning System to civil users.
In a presidential directive in 1996, Clinton promised to revisit the issue
of intentionally degrading the civil GPS signal in 2000. He had promised
to discontinue use of the degradation capability — known as selective availability — by 2006, with an annual assessment of its continued use beginning this
year.
Selective availability was deactivated at midnight on Monday, the president's
science adviser, Neal Lane, announced during a press briefing earlier in
the day.
The decision came early because the Defense Department has sufficiently
proven its ability to deny the GPS signal to adversaries in a specific region
while maintaining availability to users elsewhere, said Arthur Money, the
Pentagon's assistant secretary of Defense for command, control, communications
and intelligence.
Selective availability caused the civil GPS signal to be accurate within
100 meters. Without selective availability, users will receive position
information accurate within 10 to 20 meters.
While the modification significantly improves the accuracy of the GPS signal,
the Transportation Department is still committed to developing systems that
augment the GPS capability, said Eugene Conti, assistant secretary of Transportation
for transportation policy. Those systems, such as the Federal Aviation Administration's
Wide-Area Augmentation System and Local-Area Augmentation System and the
Coast Guard's National Differential GPS System, verify that the GPS signal
is reliable.
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