Attackers use hidden SMS and signalling systems to track targets’ location


Security researchers have just unveiled details of two covert surveillance campaigns that exploit weaknesses in the global telecom infrastructure. In a report published on Thursday, Citizen Lab explains that attackers abuse the signalling systems mobile operators use to support roaming, route messages, and locate devices on the network.

The weaknesses were used to track certain subscribers or to send invisible SMS messages that retrieved the target’s location. The findings point to a wider problem in the global mobile ecosystem, where the connections between operators can be abused. Crucially, users can do little on their end to protect themselves from these attacks; even those using the best VPN service are, in fact, vulnerable to this type of surveillance.

Read more…
Source: TechRadar News


Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox


Related:

  • Lazarus APT Uses Modular Backdoor to Target Financial Institutions

    November 21, 2018

    The advanced persistent threat group Lazarus with North Korean links has been observed using a modular backdoor during last week to compromise a series of Latin American financial institutions by Trend Micro’s Lenart Bermejo and Joelson Soares. As unearthed by the Trend Micro research team, the APT38 threat group successfully compromised a number of computing systems ...

  • L0rdix becomes the new Swiss Army knife of Windows hacking

    November 21, 2018

    A new hacking tool making the rounds in underground forums has been deemed the latest “go-to” universal offering for attackers targeting Microsoft Windows PCs. The software is called L0rdix and according to cybersecurity researchers from enSilo is “aimed at infecting Windows-based machines, combines stealing and cryptocurrency mining methods, can avoid malware analysis tools.” In a blog ...

  • Russia’s Elite Hackers May Have New Phishing Tricks

    November 20, 2018

    A major question hanging over the United States midterm election season: Where was Russia? But while GRU hackersdidn’t directly interfere, they appear to be as active as ever. New research from two threat intelligence firms indicates that two prominent Russia-linked groups have been developing some clever phishing innovations, and are working purposefully to expand their reach. “There’s a lot of ramping ...

  • True Identity of Notorious Hacker tessa88 Revealed

    November 20, 2018

    In early 2016, a previously unknown hacker operating under the alias of tessa88 publicly emerged after offering an extensive list of compromised, high-profile databases for sale. The hacker offered for sale the databases of companies such as VKontakte, Mobango, Myspace, Badoo, QIP, Dropbox, Rambler, LinkedIn, and Twitter, among others. Within several months of incredibly active ...

  • Almost 50 Percent of 2018 Vulnerabilities Can Be Exploited Remotely

    November 20, 2018

    Approximately half of all vulnerabilities disclosed during 2018 come with a remote attack vector while only 13% of them require local access according to Risk Based Security’s 2018 Q3 Vulnerability Quick View Report. As reported by Risk Based Security, 16,172 vulnerabilities were published by their VulnDB team until the end of Q3 2018, with a 7% decrease when ...

  • A little phishing knowledge may be a dangerous thing

    November 19, 2018

    Phishing works more frequently on those who understand what social engineering is than on those who live in blissful ignorance, or so a studyof students at University of Maryland, Baltimore County suggests. Citing IBM data suggesting human error is a factor in 95 per cent of security incidents, researchers from the school’s department of computer science and electrical engineering ...