Hacking phones is too easy. Time to make it harder
Regulators have avoided the problem for too long

In the mid-1960s enterprising hackers realised that if they blew a particular toy whistle down the phone, they could trick the network into routing their call anywhere, free. When phone networks got wind of this, they changed how the system worked by splitting the channel carrying the voice signal from the one managing the call. One result was the Signalling System 7, which became a global standard in 1980. ss7 stopped “phone phreaks”, as they were known. But the system, built when there were only a handful of state-controlled telecoms companies, has become woefully inadequate for the mobile age, leaving dangerous vulnerabilities at the heart of international phone networks. It is time to fix them.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Security alert”
Leaders May 25th 2024
- Why paying women to have more babies won’t work
- Rishi Sunak’s election call makes no sense, but is good news
- The war-crimes case against the leaders of Israel and Hamas is flawed
- Hacking phones is too easy. Time to make it harder
- How to save South Africa
- What India’s clout in white-collar work means for the world
More from Leaders

How to respond to the riots on Britain’s streets
The violence demands robust policing, but it also requires cool heads

Is the big state back in Britain?
The risk is not too much interventionism, but too little audacity

How to make tourism work for locals and visitors alike
Holidays don’t have to be hell
Genomic medicines can cost $3m a dose. How to make them affordable
The treatments are marvels of innovation. Their pricing must be inventive, too
Chinese companies are winning the global south
Their expansion abroad holds important lessons for Western incumbents
The Middle East must step back from the brink
That still means starting with a ceasefire in Gaza