Weaknesses within mobile phone network interconnection system allows criminals or governments to remotely snoop on anyone with a phone.
Hackers have again demonstrated that no matter how many security precautions someone takes, all a hacker needs to track their location and snoop on their phone calls and texts is their phone number.
The hack, first demonstrated by German security researcher Karsten Nohl in
2014 at a hacker convention in Hamburg, has been shown to still be active by Nohl over a year later
for CBS’s 60 Minutes.
The hack uses the network interchange service called
Signalling System No. 7 (SS7), also known as C7 in the UK or CCSS7 in the US, which acts as a broker between mobile phone networks. When calls or text messages are made across networks SS7 handles details such as number translation, SMS transfer, billing and other back-end duties that connect one network or caller to another.