> “Type ‘kiberphant0m’ on google with the quotes,” Buttholio told another user. “I’ll wait. Go ahead. Over 50 articles. 15+ telecoms breached. I got the IMSI number to every single person that’s ever registered in Verizon, Tmobile, ATNT and Verifone.”
SBF levels of self-pwning right there. When, not if, they catch him, the Feds are going to hang this clown out to dry.
I'd rather see them hang out to dry the 15+ telecoms who gave away "the IMSI number to every single person that's ever registered in..." because doing so was cheaper than investing in security.
The only data you can't leak is the data you don't have.
Therefore some data should either not be stored at all or deleted after it served its purpose.
Probably hard for a telecom company to not keep IMSI -> account association somewhere
randomized IDs and linked lists, which correspond to entries in DBs elsewhere.
IMEI 123456789 has ID sjkadnasf8uywjerhsdu, and then in the hyper locked down Mongo instance used by billing knows that sjkadnasf8uywjerhsdu relates to John Smith, credit card number xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx
make it so you have to crack all of em, instead of just nailing one and walking out w/ all the crown jewels
Yeah, in separate databases on separate systems. The network plane of a phone provider should only be able to access a database mapping IMSI -> account ID, and the billing/customer service department should only be able to access a database mapping account ID -> actual account data.
Unfortunately, anything involving phones is based on literally decades of stuff that was made in a time where every participant in the network was trusted by default, and bringing up the legacy compatibility stuff to modern standards is all but impossible.
Anthropic levels of getting seed funding from SBF and ending up a power unto themselves.