There is a simple safeguard to prevent this occurrence.
Whenever I enter a log, I look for confirmation that the log was received by
the sponsor. I prefer the type of feedback that confirms my log was received
and that the claimed score and category matches my expectations. If I was
concerned, I would again check just before the deadline. All the contests I
enter have helpful people on the other end willing to help resolve
shenanigans like this.
--
Gerald Boutin, VE1DT
Re: [CQ-Contest] authentication for log submission
from [Dick Green WC1M]
To: "'Katsuhiro Kondou'" <cq-contest@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] authentication for log submission
From: "Dick Green WC1M" <wc1m73@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 5 Jun 2012 13:40:46 -0400
List-post:
<cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
Don, you are a man after my own heart! I'm totally paranoid about security
scenarios, which is one reason LoTW security is so tight.
However, I think the scenario you describe isn't plausible. As I understand
it, the scheme would be used in a case where two stations are close in
score. It would involve the second-place station uploading an altered log
for the first-place station after the first-place station uploaded his/her
real log. The altered log would be mostly the same as the real log, but with
a few QSOs omitted or a few calls or exchanges busted. It has to be an
altered copy of the first-place station's log because if the log was a
complete fake, none of the QSOs would match during log checking. I'm sure in
such a scenario, where the log for a high claimed score generated a huge UBN
deduction, the log would be visually inspected by a person. That would alert
the contest sponsor and the first place station that something very fishy
had happened. Therefore, the altered log must be a copy of the first-place
station's log, with just enough QSOs altered to affect the standings.
The question is, how does the second-place station get a copy of the
first-place station's log? ARRL doesn't publish logs. I think CQ WW waits to
do that until after log checking, but I'm not sure. If they don't, they
should.
The only way I can see pulling this off is if the cheater had a confederate
who operated in the contest and generated a relatively high score, slightly
less than the second place station's score. The confederate's log would be
submitted under the call of the first-place station. But that depends on how
the log-checking software determines the call sign. Is it solely from the
Cabrillo header, or is the call in the header checked against the sender's
call in the individual QSO records? In any case, this is a very risky ploy
for the confederate because if the log is inspected visually by a person,
which I believe happens with most high-scoring logs, the jig will be up.
So, I don't think it would work. However, if there is a scenario that would
work, the best solution would be to use the LoTW authentication system for
log submissions. That would have the dual advantage of verifying the call
sign in the log and allowing automatic submission of the log to the LoTW QSL
system (something many have asked for.)
73, Dick WC1M
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Katsuhiro Kondou [mailto:kondou@voyackey.net]
> Sent: Monday, June 04, 2012 10:29 PM
> To: cq-contest@contesting.com
> Subject: [CQ-Contest] authentication for log submission
>
> Change the subject from the original, and removed related References
> headers.
>
> In article <4FCC7194.3080802@ei5di.com>,
> "Paul O'Kane" <pokane@ei5di.com> wrote,
> on "Mon, 04 Jun 2012 09:28:04 +0100";
>
> } In the days of paper logs, we had to submit a signed } declaration
> with each log. With electronic logs, the } declaration is assumed, but
> largely forgotten. One } practical solution is for the logging software
> to } display the declaration and ask for the operator's } agreement, by
> having to type the word YES, before the } Cabrillo log is created.
> }
> } The declaration, in effect a pledge that is renewed } with each entry,
> is good enough for me.
>
> I'm not sure this was discussed before, but this reminds me that someone
> who has malicious intention may submit other station's log to defeat the
> station after first submission by actual station.
> There looks no authentication method to verify the station for major
> contests(please correct me if I am wrong). Complicated method to
> authenticate the station may lead decreasing the number of log
> submission, so this may not be applied to all stations. But I think
> there should be some method to authenticate at least for stations who
> want to win a prize.
>
> Please ignore this message if my concern is baseless fear, the contest
> sponsors have already taken care of this, or we can trust everybody
> since we all have good morals.
> --
> Katsuhiro "Don" Kondou, JH5GHM
> Tokyo, JAPAN
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