T-Mobile, Verizon, AT&T Stop SMS Hijacks After Motherboard Investigation (vice.com) 19
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: All of the major carriers made a significant change to how SMS messages are routed to prevent hackers being able to easily reroute a target's texts, according to an announcement from Aerialink, a communications company that helps route text messages. The move comes after a Motherboard investigation in which a hacker, with minimal effort, paid $16 to reroute our text messages and then used that ability to break into a number of online accounts, including Postmates, WhatsApp, and Bumble, exposing a gaping hole in the country's telecommunications infrastructure.
"The Number Registry has announced that wireless carriers will no longer be supporting SMS or MMS text enabling on their respective wireless numbers," the March 25 announcement from Aerialink, reads. The announcement adds that the change is "industry-wide" and "affects all SMS providers in the mobile ecosystem." "Be aware that Verizon, T-Mobile and AT&T have reclaimed overwritten text-enabled wireless numbers industry-wide. As a result, any Verizon, T-Mobile or AT&T wireless numbers which had been text-enabled as BYON no longer route messaging traffic through the Aerialink Gateway," the announcement adds, referring to Bring Your Own Number.
"The Number Registry has announced that wireless carriers will no longer be supporting SMS or MMS text enabling on their respective wireless numbers," the March 25 announcement from Aerialink, reads. The announcement adds that the change is "industry-wide" and "affects all SMS providers in the mobile ecosystem." "Be aware that Verizon, T-Mobile and AT&T have reclaimed overwritten text-enabled wireless numbers industry-wide. As a result, any Verizon, T-Mobile or AT&T wireless numbers which had been text-enabled as BYON no longer route messaging traffic through the Aerialink Gateway," the announcement adds, referring to Bring Your Own Number.
Only about 23 years late or so. (Score:1)
Good grief. I was warning people about this in the 90's.
They Will Never Do Anything... (Score:5, Insightful)
...until you embarrass them or cost them money.
Usually both.
This is also why researchers and Good Samaritans need laws designed to protect them from lawsuits when this sort of negligence is exposed.
without a free press (Score:3)
It makes me wonder if we had no freedom of the press just how long would shit like this go on unchecked
If only (Score:2)
Awesome. Now plug the whole that allows them to route SMS messages to my phone from a email address.
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Actually a little research and I found this online.
https://forums.att.com/convers... [att.com]
I called up AT&T and quoted them this article number, Article 446389. Took them 5 minutes to block all email to sms and mms to my phone.
Is this why? (Score:1)
Raises hand ... (Score:2)
It has always been our policy at Sakari to only support the text-enablement of VoIP and landline phone numbers, and as soon as the industry issue was raised we placed a complete block on any mobile numbers.
Text enablement of landline numbers?
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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Certain "cloud PBX" services support SMS on what are nominally "land lines". Dialpad, for one. It's a huge help for call centers, be they mundane customer support, 911 or radio stations.
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In the UK, you can send SMS texts to most landlines. Either you have a phone that supports it (it uses the caller ID tones to send the message to the handset), or if not the exchange will call you and read out the text in a robotic voice (which can be hilarious and/or unintelligible if the sender uses txtspk). You can't send texts from a landline without a phone that supports it, though.
Although as in the UK landline numbers are distinct from mobiles (mobiles always start 07, landlines start 01 or 02) many
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Now if they could just ... (Score:3)
It would be great if they could fix the problem that results in approximately 50% of SMS/MMS messages from AT&T failing to reach my T-Mobile phone.
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It would be great if they could fix the problem that results in approximately 50% of SMS/MMS messages from AT&T failing to reach my T-Mobile phone.
My solution to this problem is to not have SMS on my mobile phone. That way 0% of SMS/MMS messages reach it--problem solved!
Thsnk you, Motherboard (Score:2)
Credit where it's due.
Now can we all switch to TOTP, FIDO, SQRL, or something better?
"Please add a phone number to improve the security of your account." :runs and screams:
Ensuring an identity has something to lose (Score:2)
Providers of services over the Internet have what regulations call a "legitimate interest" in deterring spam and other forms of abuse. This is why some services require a cell phone number even if TOTP is the service's preferred method of authentication. Other than either validating a cellular phone service subscription or just charging a recurring fee, what can a service do to ensure that a particular user has some financial investment (or "skin in the game" if you will) with respect to the user's identity