Maritime cybersecurity firms and shipping analysts are sounding alarms over a sharp uptick in GPS spoofing and jamming attacks targeting commercial vessels, especially in sensitive chokepoints. According to The Epoch Times, GPS interference events—manipulating GNSS signals used by ships—have risen by 500 percent year-on-year, with 400 incidents logged in a maritime database and about 25 percent of them involving actual vessels. Additional reporting highlights that in the Arabian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, nearly 970 vessels per day have experienced jamming-induced mislocation or erratic navigation, occasionally showing ships as if sailing over land. The container ship MSC Antonia is suspected to have run aground in May 2025 due to spoofed signals near Jeddah. These trends are mirrored in broader sector warnings: industry groups have formally alerted U.S. transportation and defense agencies to the expanding threat, while research warns that adversaries are now deploying AI-augmented spoofing to craft realistic false signals that evade standard detection.
Sources: AeroTimes, MarinePublic
Key Takeaways
– GPS spoofing and jamming incidents are accelerating sharply, particularly in conflicted maritime zones, and pose tangible risks to ship safety, routing, and collision avoidance.
– Some real-world maritime accidents—including groundings like that of MSC Antonia—are now plausibly linked to manipulated navigation signals.
– Defenses are struggling to keep pace: detection is difficult, regulatory guidance is patchy, and attackers are now leveraging AI to generate spoofed signals that closely mimic legit satellite data.
In-Depth
Over the past year, the maritime sector has quietly entered a new domain of risk—one where invisible signals determine whether a ship reaches port or drifts into danger. GPS systems, once considered reliable backbones for global navigation, are proving increasingly vulnerable to sophisticated spoofing and jamming attacks. These threats have moved beyond isolated experiments or military zones; they now target civilian shipping lanes with growing frequency.
The data emerging from maritime cybersecurity firms is chilling. According to a recent Epoch Times piece, the firm Cydome reported a 500 percent jump in GPS interference events, with 400 catalogued incidents, about one in four of which involved real vessels. In strategic corridors like the Arabian Gulf, Windward’s analytics indicate that nearly 970 ships per day have suffered jamming-induced mislocations or erratic pathing. In some cases, the vessel’s AIS and GPS display a location that makes no geographic sense—sometimes placing ships inland or in impossible positions.
These distortions aren’t purely academic. The container ship MSC Antonia is suspected to have run aground in May 2025 near Jeddah as a result of spoofed signals, according to maritime analysts and public reporting. In the Strait of Hormuz, the oil tanker Front Eagle exhibited bizarre GPS behavior shortly before colliding with another vessel; analysts suggest the collision may have stemmed from electronic interference rather than mechanical failure.
What’s changed lately is the sophistication of attackers. No longer limited to crude jamming, threat actors are now leveraging AI to generate spoofed signals that closely mimic genuine GNSS satellites—rendering detections harder. In parallel, nation-state and hacktivist groups are turning this into a geopolitical tool, especially in contested waters.
Defensive measures lag behind. Many vessels still depend almost entirely on a single GPS feed for routing, timing, and collision avoidance. Detection of spoofing is nontrivial—spoofed signals are designed to appear valid, and receivers typically lack built-in anomaly filters. Regulatory frameworks and best practices are patchy. While organizations like the U.S. Coast Guard issue advisories about GPS and AIS interference, the industry lacks standardized protocols for response. Some shipping bodies recommend redundant navigation (radar, inertial systems) and consistency checks, but adoption is uneven.
In effect, ships today are being forced to sail through a growing electronic minefield. Navigation errors triggered by spoofing can lead to collisions, groundings, or drift into restricted zones. Given that over 80 percent of global trade relies on maritime routes, the potential economic and safety fallout is enormous. The path forward will demand investment in detection technologies, adoption of layered navigation systems, and international cooperation to hold malicious actors accountable.

