Researchers Demo New GSM Attacks at Chaos Communications Congress
First time accepted submitter aeturnus writes "A new attack on the GSM mobile communications protocol has been demonstrated by Karsten Nohl and Luca Melette of Security Research Labs, based off their previously published attacks around vulnerabilities in the GSM A5/1 encryption protocol. This new attack, which Nohl indicates already in use by criminals, allows an attacker to simulate a GSM mobile and use it to make calls and send text messages. Nohl also discussed protective measures users should take against these attacks, and others in use by intelligence communities around the world." This was just one of many presentations at the 28th Chaos Communications Congress.
Too bad they didn't demonstrate it at the US Congress instead, I'd love to hear some intercepted conversations between a few Senators and their puppet-masters.
Thanks to the War on Drugs, it's easier to buy meth than it is to buy cold medicine!
FALSE!
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Sent from my Fake Mobile Handheld
From the summary, it doesn't sound like there are actually particularly feasible protective measures to use on a routine basis. All I see is some discussion of the "Catcher Catcher" software, which can be used to estimate the likelihood of an "IMSI catcher" being used in the vicinity. But this isn't something most users can practically use on a routine basis.
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
The aren't using your physical phone to send the SMS/Calls. They are only using your phone's identity.
What's the difference if it appears on your bill?
I saw Kevin Mitnick do something like this last July. He was giving a talk and asked for two people in the audience to give him their phone numbers. He typed them into his laptop and a couple of seconds later one phone received an SMS from the other one.
Couple this with a few premium-rate phone lines and thieves basically have a license to print money.
No sig today...
Firewall software on your phone doesn't stop people from using your phone's ID on a fake phone, so "maybe stuff like lookout mobile" cannot do shit about it.
I was a victim. I kept getting charged for calls that were made at odd hours of the day. The solution was to simply change my phone number. After that, no more crazy charges.
RIP TRICERATOPS, YOU NEVER EXISTED
all you need for sending sms "from" a phone number is a sms gw that let's you put anything on the sender field, it's like email in that sense.
that doesn't effect billing though. this attack does and would look more authentic in the logs, though just generating costs for the victim isn't the worst you could do with it.
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.