IMSI-catcher

An IMSI-catcher is a telephone eavesdropping device used for intercepting mobile phone traffic and tracking movement of mobile phone users. Essentially a "fake" mobile tower acting between the target mobile phone and the service provider's real towers, it is considered a man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack. IMSI-catchers are used in some countries by law enforcement and intelligence agencies, but their use has raised significant civil liberty and privacy concerns and is strictly regulated in some countries such as under the German Strafprozessordnung (German) (StPO / Code of Criminal Procedure).[1] Some countries do not even have encrypted phone data traffic (or very weak encryption), thus rendering an IMSI-catcher unnecessary.

Overview

A virtual base transceiver station (VBTS)[2] is a device for identifying the International Mobile Subscriber Identity (IMSI) of a nearby GSM mobile phone and intercepting its calls. It was patented[2] and first commercialized by Rohde & Schwarz in 2003, although it would be hard to maintain such a patent, since in reality it is just a modified cell tower with a malicious operator. On 24 January 2012, the Court of Appeal of England and Wales held that the patent is invalid for obviousness.[3]

The GSM specification requires the handset to authenticate to the network, but does not require the network to authenticate to the handset. This well-known security hole is exploited by an IMSI catcher.[4] The IMSI catcher masquerades as a base station and logs the IMSI numbers of all the mobile stations in the area, as they attempt to attach to the IMSI-catcher.[5] It allows forcing the mobile phone connected to it to use no call encryption (A5/0 mode) or to use easily breakable encryption (A5/1 or A5/2 mode), making the call data easy to intercept and convert to audio.

Body-worn IMSI-catchers that target nearby mobile phones are being advertised to law enforcement agencies in the US.[6]

IMSI-catchers are often deployed by court order without a search warrant, the lower judicial standard of a pen register and trap-and-trace order being preferred by law enforcement.[7] They can also be used in search and rescue operation for missing persons.[8]

In the UK, the first public body to admit using IMSI catchers was the Scottish Prison Service.[9]

Functionalities

Identifying an IMSI

Every mobile phone has the requirement to optimize the reception. If there is more than one base station of the subscribed network operator accessible, it will always choose the one with the strongest signal. An IMSI-catcher masquerades as a base station and causes every mobile phone of the simulated network operator within a defined radius to log in. With the help of a special identity request, it is able to force the transmission of the IMSI.

Tapping a mobile phone

The IMSI-catcher subjects the phones in its vicinity to a man-in-the-middle attack, acting to them as a preferred base station in terms of signal strength. With the help of a SIM, it simultaneously logs into the GSM network as a mobile station. Since the encryption mode is chosen by the base station, the IMSI-catcher can induce the mobile station to use no encryption at all. Hence it can encrypt the plain text traffic from the mobile station and pass it to the base station.

There is only an indirect connection from mobile station via IMSI-catcher to the GSM network. For this reason, incoming phone calls cannot generally be patched through to the mobile station by the GSM network, although more modern versions of these devices have their own mobile patch-through solutions in order to provide this functionality.

Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS)

False base station attacks are prevented by a combination of key freshness and integrity protection of signaling data, not by authenticating the serving network.[10]

To provide a high network coverage, the UMTS standard allows for inter-operation with GSM. Therefore, not only UMTS but also GSM base stations are connected to the UMTS service network. This fallback is a security disadvantage and allows a new possibility of a man-in-the-middle attack.[11]

Disclosing facts and difficulties

The assignment of an IMSI catcher has a number of difficulties:

  1. It must be ensured that the mobile phone of the observed person is in standby mode and the correct network operator is found out. Otherwise, for the mobile station, there is no need to log in to the simulated base station.
  2. Depending on the signal strength of the IMSI-catcher, numerous IMSIs can be located. The problem is to find out the right one.
  3. All mobile phones in the area covered by the catcher have no access to the network. Incoming and outgoing calls cannot be patched through for these subscribers. Only the observed person has an indirect connection.
  4. There are some disclosing factors. In most cases, the operation cannot be recognized immediately by the subscriber. But there are a few mobile phones that show a small symbol on the display, e.g. an exclamation point, if encryption is not used. This "Ciphering Indication Feature" can be suppressed by the network provider, however, by setting the OFM bit in EFAD on the SIM card. Since the network access is handled with the SIM/USIM of the IMSI-catcher, the receiver cannot see the number of the calling party. Of course, this also implies that the tapped calls are not listed in the itemized bill.
  5. The assignment near the base station can be difficult, due to the high signal level of the original base station.

Detection and counter-measures

Some preliminary research has been done in trying to detect and frustrate IMSI-catchers. One such project is through the Osmocom open source Mobile Station software. This is a special type of mobile phone firmware that can be used to detect and fingerprint certain network characteristics of IMSI-catchers, and warn the user that there is such a device operating in their area. But this firmware/software-based detection is strongly limited to a select few, outdated GSM mobile phones (i.e. Motorola) that are no longer available on the open market. The main problem is the closed-source nature of the major mobile phone producers.

The application Android IMSI-Catcher Detector (AIMSICD) is being developed to detect and circumvent IMSI-catchers, StingRay and silent SMS.[12] Technology for a stationary network of IMSI-catcher detectors has also been developed.[4]

See also

Footnotes

  1. "Section 100i - IMS I-Catcher", The German Code Of Criminal Procedure (PDF), 2014, pp. 43–44
  2. 1 2 EP 1051053, Frick, Joachim & Rainer Bott, "Verfahren zum Identifizieren des Benutzers eines Mobiltelefons oder zum Mithören der abgehenden Gespräche", issued 2003-07-09
  3. MMI Research Ltd v Cellxion Ltd & Ors [2012] EWCA Civ 7 (24 January 2012), Court of Appeal judgment invalidating Rohde & Schwarz patent.
  4. 1 2 "Digitale Selbstverteidigung mit dem IMSI-Catcher-Catcher". c't (in German). 27 August 2014.
  5. "The Spyware That Enables Mobile-Phone Snooping". Bloomberg View. 27 November 2013.
  6. "The body-worn 'IMSI catcher' for all your covert phone snooping needs". Ars Technica. 1 September 2013.
  7. Farivar, Cyrus (13 April 2015). "County prosecutor says it has no idea when stingrays were used, so man sues". Ars Technica. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  8. "Wingsuit-Flieger stürzt in den Tod". Blick (in German). 10 July 2015. Retrieved 11 July 2015.
  9. https://theferret.scot/imsi-catcher-trial-scottish-prison-service/
  10. Chris Mitchell, Paulo Pagliusi: Is Entity Authentication Necessary?, in Security Protocols, Springer LNCS 2845,pages 20-29, 2004
  11. Meyer, Ulrike; Wetzel, Susanne (1 October 2004). "A Man-in-the-Middle Attack on UMTS. ACM workshop on Wireless security, 2004" (PDF). Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  12. "Android IMSI-Catcher Detector (AIMSICD) Wiki, Development status". 9 December 2015. Retrieved 10 October 2016. In alpha stage in October 2016.

Further reading

External links

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