AT&T Sued After SIM Hijacker Steals $24 Million in Customer's Cryptocurrency
from the whoops-a-daisy dept
It has only taken a few years, but the press, public and law enforcement appear to finally be waking up to the problem of SIM hijacking. SIM hijacking (aka SIM swapping or a "port out scam") involves a hacker hijacking your phone number, porting it over to their own device (often with a wireless carrier employee's help), then taking control of your personal accounts. As we've been noting, the practice has heated up over the last few years, with countless wireless customers saying their entire identities were stolen after thieves ported their phone number to another carrier, then took over their private data.
Sometimes this involves selling valuable Instagram account names for bitcoin; other times it involves clearing out the target's banking or cryptocurrency accounts. Case in point: California authorities recently brought the hammer down on one 20-year-old hacker, who had covertly ported more than 40 wireless user accounts, in the process stealing nearly $5 million in bitcoin.
One of the problems at the core of this phenomenon is that hackers have either tricked or paid wireless carrier employees to aid in the hijacking, or in some instances appear to have direct access to (apparently) poorly-secured internal carrier systems. That has resulted in lawsuits against carriers like T-Mobile for not doing enough to police their own employees, the unauthorized access of their systems, or the protocols utilized to protect consumer accounts from this happening in the first place.
While T-Mobile has received the lion's share of negative press attention on this subject in recent months, AT&T this week got dragged into the fun. The company was sued this week for $224 million by a customer who says AT&T's failure to adequately protect his account resulted in the theft of nearly $24 million in cryptocurrency. The full complaint (pdf) notes that AT&T customer Michael Terpin is seeking $200 million in punitive damages and $24 million of compensatory damages for the cryptocurrency losses.
The suit alleges that Terpin had his phone number stolen and ported out at least twice between mid 2017 and early 2018, resulting in the thief then hijacking his identity to empty out his cryptocurrency accounts. Terpin also accuses of AT&T of failing to protect its customers despite ample press coverage of the SIM hijacking phenomenon. Worse perhaps, the lawsuit alleges that the thief successfully hijacked his phone number despite AT&T adding "higher security level" protections, which AT&T specifically stated would protect his account from such hijinks. From the complaint:
"AT&T is doing nothing to protect its almost 140 million customers from SIM card fraud. AT&T is therefore directly culpable for these attacks because it is well aware that its customers are subject to SIM swap fraud and that its security measures are ineffective. AT&T does virtually nothing to protect its customers from such fraud because it has become too big to care."
Again, carriers haven't really much wanted to talk about this phenomenon, or the fact that their own employees are frequently either being hoodwinked or paid to participate in these thefts. And while carriers are trying to add additional security to protect such ports from happening (for example, T-Mobile customers should call 611 from their phone and demand a "port validation” passcode), the problem of carrier employees playing a starring role in these scams hasn't yet been fully addressed. It's likely the growing number of lawsuits by hoodwinked users will add some additional incentive to do so.
Filed Under: cryptocurrency, michael terpin, security, sim hijack
Companies: at&t