Right, quite often these have been mistakes, where some mistypes their
callsign (one character off, or such), and if you can figure out who it
is, based on their broadcasted location (assuming it is correct), you can
perhaps nicely ask them to use their own callsign.
If asking nicely does not help, it's more difficult.
If they're doing it on the RF side, it could be reported to the local
authorities, who could perhaps care about it as it'd be a violation of
local regulations (in some places, they might not care).
In this case it's done on the Internet, and it's more difficult. I could
perhaps block it on
aprs.fi, but the packets are actually sent on the
APRS-IS, and they're visible on a bunch of other sites and databases too,
and to all APRS-IS clients directly connected to the network.
Using your own callsign on APRS will at least interfere with those
operations and might get them to reconfigure. And perhaps pick someone
else's callsign, who will then be upset :(
The basic underlying problem is that there's no method for you to prove to
the software on a a web site or service that you, as an Internet service
user, are the legitimate holder of a callsign (without someone doing
manual work to decipher foreign ID and license documents, which would be
too much work).
On Fri, 6 Feb 2026, Alex B wrote:
>
> YO3ABC
> Alexandru Barbu
>
>
> Position recorded on 11.01.2026 15:48:36
> It isn't me :-)
> I attach a print screen
>
> Maybe it's a mistake 😔
>
> It is possible to make APRSdroid app
> to request login to
aprs.fi to upload the data
>
> Thank you very much
> Best wishes
> Alex
>
>
> [IMAGE]
>
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/aprsfi/CAOC5QtWEtAoHWd%2BnXh-L0fDcjUvSSvbn%2B2Ge0A7WnFFqOWrM6w%40mail.gmail.com.
>
>
- Hessu