Air Force to Send Hackers to Space, Sort of.

AuthorLuckenbaugh, Josh

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado -- An upcoming Air Force Research Laboratory program will unleash teams of hackers to test the vulnerability of space systems and provide data on how to make future systems more resilient.

In June, AFRL is scheduled to launch a satellite called Moonlighter, which will be used as a "literal hacking sandbox in space" for the lab's Hack-A-Sat hacking competition, its program manager Rachel Mann said during a media briefing at the Space Foundation's Space Symposium.

Hack-A-Sat is "a unique opportunity to kind of bridge the gap between cyber and space," she said. "And so with government, academia, industry, it's really a new opportunity to stimulate innovation through competition."

Developed in partnership with Space Systems Command and The Aerospace Corp., Moonlighter features a dedicated cyber payload, as well as a reprogrammable payload computer "that behaves like a flight computer" and allows for "cyber experiments to be repeatable, realistic and secure, while maintaining the health and safety of the satellite," an Aerospace Corp. fact sheet stated.

Five teams of white hats advanced from the competition's public qualification round in April and will attempt to hack Moonlighter while it is in orbit during Hack-A-Sat's "first-of-its-kind" final event, which will be held Aug. 11-13 at the DEF CON hacking conference in Las...

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