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60 MINUTES ASKED A SECURITY FIRM TO HACK AN

Publicado: 2016-04-19


  With all the commotion surrounding Apple’s fight with the FBI, 60 Minutes did its own experiment to find out just how safe our phones are from hackers. Unfortunately even with Apple’s strong encryption standards, everyone’s privacy is still in serious jeopardy.

  60 Minutes’ Sharyn Alfonsi went to Berlin in search of the word’s best hackers, and she found Security Research Labs led by Karsten Nohl, who has a doctorate in computer engineering from the University of Virginia.

  Related: Apple vs. the FBI: A complete timeline of the war over tech encryption

  By day, the firm specializes in advising Fortune 500 companies on security, but in the wee hours of the night, the team hacks devices we use every day in order to warn consumers and companies of existing vulnerabilities before the bad guys find them.

  Alfonsi challenged the team to break into an off-the-shelf iPhone from New York that was given to U.S. Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., a member of the House Oversight and Reform Subcommittee on Information Technology. Lieu agreed to the experiment knowing the phone would likely be hacked.

  “First, it’s really creepy. And second, it makes me angry.”

  Turns out that all the team needed was the phone number to the iPhone. They were easily able to hear and record phone calls, see Lieu’s contacts, and know his whereabouts. They were even able to get the phone number of every incoming and outgoing call to and from his “borrowed” iPhone.

  Even though Lieu knew beforehand the phone would be hacked, the reality of it was more startling. When a recording of one particular conversation was played back to him, he said, “First, it’s really creepy. And second, it makes me angry.”

  This was all possible from a security flaw in Signaling System 7 (SS7), a little-known global network that connects all the phone carriers around the world. It’s known as the heart of the phone system. The bad news here is that it affects every phone on a cellular network, whether it’s running iOS, Android, or even Windows. Even if a user turns off location services on their phone, hackers would still be able to see the phone’s location via the network.

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  Unfortunately, no single entity governs the SS7 networks around the world, so it’s up to each carrier to make its own network secure. Nohl did say that some networks are harder to crack than others, but they all appear to be hackable.

  60 Minutes contacted the Cellular Trade Industry Association (CTIA) and the organization admitted of some security breaches overseas, but said all the U.S. networks are secure. Unfortunately Nohl and his team proved that to be untrue since Lieu’s phone was in the U.S. during the time of the experiment.

  Now if this isn’t scary enough for you, consider that Alfonsi also visited Lookout Security co-founder John Hering. To prove that every phone is hackable, he put together a team in Las Vegas to hack Alfonsi’s own phone. The team created a ghost network that appeared to be a hotel Wi-Fi. Once Alfonsi connected to this ghost network (thinking it was a legit hotel network), the team was able to get her email address, her account ID, and all the credit cards associated with it. Hering also showed how he could spy on Alfonsi using the front facing camera on her phone.

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