Yes Stephen, I meant thin sims and their security. Just saw some article comparing the two main mobile money services and I understand Equitel also has (normal) SIMS. 2015-07-21 16:48 GMT+03:00 Stephen Munguti <kamitu.sm@gmail.com>:
I think we should separate the issue of Equitel from the issue of Thin sims. Equitel also has a normal sim even though its the first to introduce the thin sims into kenya
On Tue, Jul 21, 2015 at 4:34 PM, Grace Mutung'u (Bomu) <nmutungu@gmail.com
wrote:
Very interesting turn the discussion has taken. Understandably, Equitel is something to watch as it could disrupt the market. many hope it will. Are techies here telling us that the security of using Equitel SIM cannot be guaranteed unless there are strict internal controls? Does this mean we already need laws for what is quite a novel application in Kenya? And how does ethics as mentioned by Jaco come in here if at all?
2015-07-21 16:17 GMT+03:00 Lesley Leposo via Security < security@lists.my.co.ke>:
Cool Steve.
Now from a policy and regulation standpoint, the fundamental isssue (by far) is that….
A *proprietary* technology is being deployed by a public utility/service.
There are always major risks with going “proprietary” vs. standardized/open/open-source.
On Jul 21, 2015, at 4:11 PM, Stephen Munguti <kamitu.sm@gmail.com> wrote:
@ fredrick,
I don't think the issue is with Equitel (given that they have normal sim cards in use), I think the issue is the thin sim
@lesley
noted
On Tue, Jul 21, 2015 at 3:52 PM, fredrick Wahome <frewah85@gmail.com> wrote:
They would not have prevented thin SIM adoption but they would have played some politics using science. For now lets hope that Mwangi is going to disrupt this market and deliver us from monopolization.
On Tue, Jul 21, 2015 at 3:36 PM, Stephen Munguti via Security < security@lists.my.co.ke> wrote:
@lesley,
The key issue is the data exchange between the Safaricom SIM card and the phone (this has nothing to do with the Safaricom Servers), bearing in mind that there exists a third party between the Safaricom SIM and the Phone
On Tue, Jul 21, 2015 at 3:28 PM, Lesley Leposo <leposo@unoasystems.com
wrote:
Everyone is griping about the keys (i.e. triplets and session keys derived from that). I think someone needs to be very specific about the security threat involved here and both players aren’t revealing much.
IMHO, there are at least 3 areas where security threats can emerge:
1) Normally EAP-SIM would be used to authenticate the client/phone vs. the telco server (Safaricom in this case). The valuable information in this case would be the SIM triplets (and derived session key). Hence, this baseline EAP-SIM needs to be protected (Safaricom knows how this is done). If it isn’t, then we already have a problem that’s not due to thin-siim.
2) For the thin-sim, another EAP-SIM negotiation between the client/phone vs. the overlay sever (Equity in this case). The valuable information again would be the thin-SIM triplets (and derived session key). Hence this overlay EAP-SIM needs to be protected in a manner that Safaricom can’t even see it… this is totally in the domain of how Equity has designed their network and their provisioning. (e.g. by encrypted negotiation & tunnelling directly between the client/phone and the Equity server).
3) For the handsets, they would have to make sure that the telco applications can’t snoop or inject traffic/data into each other’s walled garden - there are 2 walled gardens in this case. The walled garden includes the sim triplets (and derived session key) along with each telco network routes, policies, arp-cache and tcp/ip connections. There exists a possibility of threats due to backwards incompatibility (with phones that can’t fully manage these walled gardens). Perhaps this is what Safaricom is complaining about?
On Jul 21, 2015, at 2:20 PM, Mwendwa Kivuva via Security < security@lists.my.co.ke> wrote:
> @mwendwa, > > Its possible for the owner of the network of the thin sim to be privy to information that only the host network sim should be having. It all comes back to someone internal at Equitel having the proper technical skills and motivation to use the same
Stephen, Then we have a major problem right there. I would not like Safaricom to disown any responsibility on their part when my security is compromised because I used thin sim. Therefore any security conscious users would not dare jeopardize their transactions by using thin sim. The question then is, how many of us care about their transaction security?
>> >> On Tue, Jul 21, 2015 at 1:52 PM, Mwendwa Kivuva via skunkworks < skunkworks@lists.my.co.ke> wrote: >>> >>> Then the trending issue of the day. Equitel. Safaricom had taken Equity to court and sounded a big warning on the use of thin sim. http://www.businessdailyafrica.com/Corporate-News/Safaricom-sounds-warning-t... >>> >>> London-based GSMA, the global association of telecoms operators using the GSM technology, wrote to the Kenyan authorities warning of the risks that use of the slim SIM cards pose to the integrity of the mobile telecommunications platforms.The GSMA said the overlay SIM (which is embedded between a normal SIM card and the device) has the potential of harvesting and revealing sensitive data passing the system. >>> >>> Of course we all know Safaricom failed miserably in stopping Equity from progressing with its plans. >>> >>> Now the thin sim is here, and Equitel has said it will encrypt all data to and from the thin sim. Can experts in this area assure us that the use of thin sims will not affect the integrity of M-Pesa transactions? >>> >>> Regards >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> skunkworks mailing list >>> skunkworks@lists.my.co.ke >>> ------------ >>> List info, subscribe/unsubscribe >>> http://lists.my.co.ke/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/skunkworks >>> ------------ >>> >>> Skunkworks Rules >>> http://my.co.ke/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=24&t=94 >>> ------------ >>> Other services @ http://my.co.ke
>> >> >> >> >> -- >> >> Best Regards, >> Stephen Munguti. >> >> +254720425104 > > > > > -- > > Best Regards, > Stephen Munguti. > > +254720425104
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