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IEEE Princeton / Central Jersey Section, Life Members, present:

"From Enigma to Now: A Journey Through Wireless Security" - Joe Jesson

ABSTRACT: Joseph discusses wireless security beginning with WWII enigma code interception and decryption methods along with the heros and heroines who worked around the clock to save the allied nations. The cold war, following WWII, introduced additional risks and new challenges and, by example, wireless security failures, ease of wireless packet intercept, and a list of encryption methods with inherent security defects. Finally, wireless risks present in 2025 are shown as security aircraft, ship, automotive, and military cases aircraft, drones, and ship examples. IMSI-catcher is a telephone eavesdropping device used for intercepting mobile phone traffic and tracking location data of mobile phone users. A "fake" base station may be installed in a building, state police trunk, or UAVs and Balloons (!) and targeted cell phones acquired, tracked, & logged. This mapping and the service provider's real towers is considered a man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack. However, sophisticated attacks may be able to downgrade 3G and LTE to non-LTE network services - which do not require mutual authentication - and calls intercepted. State-of-the-art 5G Cellular security technology and the identified risks of base-station's dynamically changing protocols, hardware BTS trojans, and group cellids and location interception challenges are highlighted. Originally presented at a Rutgers IEEE dinner, a professor commented it would be a sleepless night after hearing the risks outlined!

SPEAKER'S BIOGRAPHY: Joseph Jesson, is CEO of RFSigint Group, a wireless sensor platform IP and SOC supply-chain advisory company, Adj ECE Professor at The College of New Jersey, and currently consults with corporations on wireless sensor networks (LPWAN narrowband digital technology). Joe has 25+ years of experience in designing and implementing - through production - IoT wireless sensors & embedded systems and was awarded General Electric's Innovation prize, the Edison Award, in 2007. Joe was awarded over 15 patents, published in the IEEE IoT Journal, and engineered and tested wireless TEMPEST-shielded secure systems. Currently IEEE Princeton LIFE Affinity Group Chair.

Date and Time
Date: 22 Oct 2025Time: 07:00 PM EDT to 08:30 PM EDT

This presentation will take place over Zoom. Pre-registration is required to receive the Zoom link. Visit the IEEE event page, at:
https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/507015
for instructions.

Professional Development
Network Engineering
Wireless Communications
Encryption
IEEE

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