UMTS
Posted Jan 8, 2010 16:05 UTC (Fri) by
anton (guest, #25547)
In reply to:
UMTS by anselm
Parent article:
GSM encryption crack made public
The priorities of the NSA are not necessarily the priorities of the
mobile providers and their paying customers. However, the ideal of
not being able to decrypt the messages in the middle with an ordinary
mobile phone is probably hard to attain, because there is no
end-to-end authentication, so I don't see how man-in-the-middle
attacks could be detected. Hmm, the SIM cards could identify
themselves, and so one could detect a change in SIM cards after the
first time one has had a call to that number; so the man-in-the-middle
would have to be there from the start to avoid getting noticed (but
that assumes that the NSA does not have the data necessary for faking
this identification). So yes, if citizens value their privacy, they
have to do end-to-end encryption themselves, do their own key
management, and they have to be sure they can trust their encryption
device.
If a provider conspires with the NSA (or similar organizations) to
subvert the privacy of their paying customers, then decrypting and
reencrypting the connection will be the least of the costs
that is incurred in that action: They have to pay for some human or
voice-recognition computer to understand what was said, and either of
these options will be more expensive than decrypting and re-encrypting
the connection.
Your use of "thugs" for citizens who value their privacy appears
to come from the idea that innocent citizens have nothing to hide. Do
you wear clothes in warm weather? Do you have curtains in your home?
If yes, why? Do you have something to hide?
Why do you think that users impersonating others will eat into the
provider's revenue (especially if all the providers have that problem)?
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