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#simswapping

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@stman @Sempf @LaF0rge yes.

Because physical SIMs, like any "cryptographic chipcard" (i.e. @nitrokey ) did all that fancy public/private crypto on silicon and unless that was compromizeable (which AFAICT always necessistated physical access to the #SIM, espechally in pre-#OMAPI devices) the SIM wasn't 'cloneable' and the weakest link always had been the #MNO /.#MVNO issueing (may it be through #SocialHacking employees into #SimSwapping or LEAs showng up with a warrant and demanding "#LawfulInterception"):

Add to that the regression in flexibility:

Unlike a #SimCard which was designed as a vendor-independent, #MultiVendor, #MultiProvider, device agnostic unit to facilitate the the #authentification and #encryption in #GSM (and successor standards), #eSIMs act to restrict #DeviceFreedom and #ConsumerChoice, which with shit like #KYC per #IMEI (i.e. #Turkey demands it after 90 days of roaming per year) und #lMEI-based #Allowlisting (see #Australia's shitty #VoLTE + #2G & #3G shutdown!) are just acts to clamp down on #privacy and #security.

  • And with #EID being unique per #eSIM (like the #IMEI on top!) there's nothing stopping #cyberfacist regimes like "P.R." #China, #Russia, #Iran, ... from banning "#eSIMcards" (#eSIM in SIM card form factor) or entire device prefixes (i.e. all phones that are supported by @GrapheneOS ), as M(V)NOs see the EID used to deploy/activate a profile (obviously they don't want people to activate eSIMs more than once, unless explicitly allowed otherwise.

"[…] [Technologies] must always be evaluated for their ability to oppress. […]

  • Dan Olson

And now you know why I consider a #smartphone with eSIM instead of two SIM slots not as a real #DualSIM device because it restricts my ability to freely move devices.

  • And whilst German Courts reaffirmed §77 TKG (Telco Law)'s mandate to letting people choose their devices freely, (by declarong #fees for reissue of eSIMs illegal) that is only enforceable towards M(V)NOs who are in #Germany, so 'good luck' trying to enforce that against some overseas roaming provider.

Thus #Impersonation attacks in GSM-based networks are easier than ever before which in the age of more skilled than ever #Cybercriminals and #Cyberterrorists (i.e. #NSA & #Roskomnadnozr) puts espechally the average #TechIlliterate User at risk.

  • I mean, anyone else remember the #Kiddies that fucked around with #CIA director #Brennan? Those were just using their "weapons-grade #boredom", not being effective, for-profit cyber criminals!

And then think about those who don't have privilegued access to protection by their government, but rather "privilegued access" to prosecution by the state because their very existance is criminalized...

The only advantage eSIMs broight in contrast is 'logistical' convenience because it's mostly a #QRcode and that's just a way to avoid typos on a cryptic #LocalProfileAgent link.

$38,000… GONE while he was sleeping.

That’s how fast SIM-swapping can destroy your financial life.

In just 3 hours, a hacker took over Justin Chan’s phone number, intercepted his two-factor codes, and emptied his bank and trading accounts. No alarms. No notifications. Just silent access and drained funds.

It didn’t happen because he was careless.
It happened because the attacker exploited a broken system:

- His mobile carrier transferred his number to a new device without proper checks
- His 2FA codes were sent to that new device
- His bank and investment apps trusted that number

This is the $38,000 mistake most people never see coming. Because by the time you realize something is wrong — it’s already too late.

The worst part? Getting the money back was harder than the hack itself.
It took media pressure, endless follow-ups, and months of stress just to get refunded.

Mobile numbers are the new master key — and most people are handing them out unlocked.

If your 2FA is tied to your phone number, it's time to change that.
If your carrier doesn’t lock down your SIM by default, it’s time to upgrade.
And if your bank’s idea of protection is a form letter and a closed case, don’t wait for a wake-up call at 3AM.

Noah Urban, aka "King Bob" and a suspected member of Scattered Spider, pleaded guilty this week in a case involving wire fraud, cryptocurrency theft, phishing, and simswapping. He had cases against him in Florida and California. Other people indicted with him have yet to be tried or to make plea deals, and one young man from Scotland has been detained in Spain pending determination of extradition request (I haven't found any update on the extradition case).

databreaches.net/2025/04/06/fl

or jump directly to Urban's plea agreement:
storage.courtlistener.com/reca

#wirefraud, #cryptocurrency, #phishing, #simswapping, #identitytheft

Schluss mit SMS-Codes: Google ersetzt Authentifizierung bei Gmail durch QR-Codes
Google hat angekündigt, die SMS-basierte Zwei-Faktor-Authentifizierung (2FA) bei Gmail durch QR-Codes zu ersetzen. Mit dieser Änderung verfol
apfeltalk.de/magazin/news/schl
#News #Services #Authentifizierung #Gmail #Google #Kontoschutz #Phishing #QRCode #Sicherheit #SIMSwapping #SMSCodesAblsen #ZweiFaktorAuthentifizierung