It sounds like GPS, and thus a GPS-based stratum 1 server, uses these time servers, but they were successfully failed over:
> Jeff finished off the email mentioning the US GPS system failed over successfully to the WWV-Ft. Collins campus. So again, for almost everyone, there was zero issue, and the redundancy designed into the system worked like it's supposed to.
So failures in these systems are potentially correlated.
The author mentions another solution. Apparently he runs his own atomic clock. I didn’t know this was a thing an individual could do.
> But even with multiple time sources, some places need more. I have two Rubidium atomic clocks in my studio, including the one inside a fancy GPS Disciplined Oscillator (GPSDO). That's good for holdover. Even if someone were jamming my signal, or my GPS antenna broke, I could keep my time accurate to nanoseconds for a while, and milliseconds for months. That'd be good enough for me.
The CSACs that I have in a couple devices are 'atomic', and use Rubidium, but they're a bit lower accuracy than Cesium clocks [1] or Hydrogen Masers [2].
There are a few folks on the time-nuts mailing list who own such exotic pieces of hardware, but those are pretty far out of reach for most!
Atomic clocks cover a pretty big range of performance nowadays. You can pick up a used but serviceable rubidium frequency reference for a few hundred dollars but the difference between it and the top of the line clocks is almost as big as the difference between a it and a good pendulum clock.
Be aware that there are members of the NTP pool with less-than-honorable intentions and you don't get to pick-and-choose. Yes, they all should provide the time, but they also get your IP address.
For example: unlike the IPv4 space, the IPv6 space is too big too scan, so a number of "researchers" (if you want to call them that) put v6-capable NTP servers in the NTP pool to gather information about active v6 blocks to scan/target.
Is this one of those extraordinary claims that requires evidence? Or is it generally true that there are homey-pots in many of these services (NTP, mirrors, etc)
Most places that need accurate time get it from GPS. That is 10-100 ns.
Also, you can use multiple NIST servers. They have ones in Fort Collins, CO and Gaithersburg, MD. Most places shouldn't use NIST directly but Stratum 1 name servers.
Finally, NTP isn't accurate enough, 10-100 ms, for microsecond error to matter.
Use NTP with ≥4 diverse time sources, just as RFC 5905 suggests doing. And use GPS.
(If you're reliant upon only one source of a thing, and that thing is important to you in some valuable way, then you're doing it wrong. In other words: Backups, backups, backups.)
Suggestions from the community for more reliable alternatives?