penny wrote:Can the registry of a DB be determined in hyper? Especially if it isn't broadcasting its registry in hyper. Which I doubt is galactic law. And not enough justification even if it is law.
Unknown. We know ships have IFF transponders which seem to normally broadcast their registration - and we also know they can be reset to broadcast false info.
Honor Among Enemies wrote:Resetting the transponder beacon of a starship was the equivalent of the old wet-navy trick of flying false colors. It was acknowledged as a legitimate ruse de guerre by most star nations and sanctioned by half a dozen interstellar accords, but the Andermani Empire had never formally accepted it.
From that same book it looks like ships normally run their transponders in hyper (certainly Wayfarer was running her transponder using one of her false Andy identities when she stumbled across the fleeing liner with the Hauptmans aboard)
But it looks like a ship has limited ability to verify that a transponder is broadcasting accurate information. All they seem to be able to do is compare what they can see of the ship with their onboard ship recognition database. That should be quite complete and up to date on ships registered by their own government but more hit and miss on other ships (foreign ships you'd presumably only have good info on if the system they're registered with had an information sharing agreement with you; if said ship had visited one of your ports; used one of your wormholes; or happened to be near one of your warships that was visiting a foreign port.
And in interstellar space you don't have to right to stop and inspect ships on suspicion like you might within the 12 hour limit around any of your stars.
So if the transponder is on, and you're close enough to read it, you can tell who they're claiming to be. But I don't know if you're allowed to investigate further in interstellar space if a ship isn't broadcasting their transponder info. And your ability to determine the transponder ID didn't match the known characteristics of the ship it was claiming to be is highly variable. And I'm also not sure what you're legally permitted to do even if you determine a ship is likely broadcasting a false transponder ID.
My guess would be that if you can prove they're registered by your government, or their stupid or unlucky enough to falsely claim to be registered by your government you can stop and inspect them even in interstellar space. Presumably countries could sign treaties allowing similar rights to warships of their treaty partner (so Manticore might have a treaty allowing them to inspect Grayson registered shipping). But otherwise you likely don't have any right to do anything even if you know they're lying about who they are.