Despite the rise of cybersecurity infrastructure, the online identity still faces many risks, including those related to the hacks of one’s phone numbers.
In early July, LayerZero CEO Bryan Pellegrino became one of the latest victims of a SIM swap attack, which allowed hackers to briefly take over his Twitter.
And... we're back in. This was basically my life for the past 24 hours. Luckily we saw hack immediately and the battle began pic.twitter.com/pjrkMfQ2vT
“My guess is that somebody grabbed my badge out of the trash and somehow was able to trick a rep into using it as a form of ID for the SIM swap while I was leaving Collision,” Pellegrino wrote soon after having his Twitter account back.
“It was ‘Bryan Pellegrino — speaker’ just your normal paper conference badge,” Pellegrino told Cointelegraph.
The incident involving Pellegrino’s mishap may lead to users assuming that performing a SIM swap hack is as easy as just grabbing someone’s badge. Cointelegraph has reached out to some cryptocurrency security firms to find out whether that’s the case.
A SIM swap hack is a form of identity theft where attackers take over a victim’s phone number, allowing them to gain access to bank accounts, credit cards or crypto accounts.
In 2021, the Federal Bureau of Investigation received more than 1,600 SIM swapping complaints involving losses of more than $68 million. This represented a 400% increase in the number of complaints received in the three prior years, indicating that SIM swapping is “definitely on the rise,” CertiK’s director of security operations Hugh Brooks told Cointelegraph.
“If there is no move away from SMS-based 2FA and telecommunications providers do not lift their security standards, we are likely to see attacks continue to
Read more on cointelegraph.com