FAQ Answer
What does AIS-140 compliance really mean for live fleet tracking?
Related FAQs: Why does municipal GPS software fail when scaling from pilot programs to full city deployment?
Support Context
Why this answer matters
This FAQ is sourced directly from our support database. It helps teams deploy GPSController faster, reduce onboarding friction, and understand platform compatibility for real-world fleet operations.
Answer summary
True AIS-140 compliance means your tracker must reliably send specific data—location, speed, ignition status—to a server at regular intervals. The certification ensures basic function, but real-world conditions like urban signal blockage, n...
Who it helps
- Fleet managers validating device compatibility
- Operations teams planning installation workflows
- Support teams troubleshooting GPS platform setup
- Platform-ready guidance for GPS devices and integrations
- Clear operational steps for setup and troubleshooting
- Updated answer content aligned with live deployments
Key terms
GPS tracking, fleet management, device installation, protocol setup, connectivity validation, and GPSController compatibility.
Implementation checklist
- Confirm device model, firmware, and protocol version
- Validate SIM coverage and network band support
- Map required sensors and IO configuration
- Test live device reporting before full rollout
Ideal use cases
- Fleet tracking, cold-chain monitoring, and asset recovery
- Compliance audits and safety analytics
- Fuel monitoring and route optimization
- Driver behavior insights and incident response
How to apply this
Collect device specs and confirm integration requirements.
Align configuration with GPSController platform rules.
Run a pilot test and scale across the fleet.
Related FAQs
When should I consider upgrading my fleet tracking system to prevent spoofing?
You should consider upgrading when you can't trust location data for core operations like verifying deliveries or getting reliable geofencing alerts for importa...
Can GNSS spoofing affect multiple vehicles in a fleet simultaneously?
Yes, absolutely. A powerful transmitter near your yard or depot can drown out real GPS signals for every vehicle and tracker in the area, making it appear as if...
What are the main compliance risks for delivery fleets from GNSS spoofing?
GNSS spoofing makes your operational records fraudulent. This includes ELD logs for driver hours, geotagged proof-of-delivery documents, and route histories. If...
How can I distinguish between GNSS spoofing and normal GPS signal loss in my fleet?
Look for physically impossible data patterns. Spoofing often shows sudden huge location jumps, steady directional drift, or vehicles appearing in impossible loc...
Can GPS jamming detection software differentiate between natural signal blockage and active jamming?
Usually no. Most software cannot tell the difference between natural signal blockage (like a metal building) and active jamming. This often leads to false posit...
When should I replace my tracking system instead of just upgrading software?
Replace when your current hardware lacks RF sensing capability and you face high-theft risk or strict compliance needs. Software alone cannot generate the foren...
Answer Snapshot
True AIS-140 compliance means your tracker must reliably send specific data—location, speed, ignition status—to a server at regular intervals. The certification ensures basic function, but real-world conditions like urba...



















