Gemalto Takes The Lenovo Approach: Denies Any Real Risk From NSA Hacking Its Encryption Keys

from the nothing-to-see-here... dept

Apparently, execs at Gemalto went to the same crisis management training program as the top execs at Lenovo. As you probably recall, last week The Intercept revealed that the NSA and GCHQ had hacked into the systems at Gemalto, the world’s largest maker of SIM cards for mobile phones, in order to get access to their encryption keys. This is a pretty massive security breach, allowing these intelligence agencies to decrypt calls that people thought were encrypted. But Gemalto insists its SIM cards are perfectly secure:

?Initial conclusions already indicate that Gemalto SIM products (as well as banking cards, passports and other products and platforms) are secure and the Company doesn?t expect to endure a significant financial prejudice.?

This sounds an awful lot like Lenovo’s initial reaction to the reports about the Superfish/Komodia vulnerability it shoved onto many of its customers computers, saying (totally incorrectly):

We have thoroughly investigated this technology and do not find any evidence to substantiate security concerns.

Lenovo, at least, pretty quickly changed its tune and admitted to it being a major problem. Of course, there are some differences here. With Lenovo, the company had made the choice to include Superfish — whereas the Gemalto hacking was done (obviously) without the company’s knowledge. You’d hope that the company would be much more upfront about the seriousness of the issue, rather than insisting that everything is just fine and dandy.

Of course, it’s that last phrase — about not having to “endure a significant financial prejudice” — that shows what’s really going on. Gemalto’s stock price took a huge hit, and the company is trying to assure investors that everything is okay — not necessarily its customers. See if you can tell when the news about this came out?

So now the question is, which is more important to Gemalto? Keeping its stock price up or its users secure?

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Comments on “Gemalto Takes The Lenovo Approach: Denies Any Real Risk From NSA Hacking Its Encryption Keys”

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33 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Yes, the NSA is making very clear they want to take full power. This is quite literally how to usurp a throne.

King(Executive, Legislative, Judicial) gives agency mountains of power and trust. Agency uses that mountain of power and trust to subvert surrounding agencies… Executive, Legislative, and Judicial branches never see it coming. They are so driven by their fear of the people they never learned to fear their fellow peeps.

Carl

Michael (profile) says:

“Initial conclusions already indicate that Gemalto SIM products (as well as banking cards, passports and other products and platforms) are secure and the Company doesn’t expect to endure a significant financial prejudice.”

Well sir, your initial conclusions must have missed the part about YOU HAVING BEEN HACKED YOU MORON!

That is the definition of insecure. Someone else has the data. Now, you MAY be trying to argue that nobody ELSE has compromised your systems, but if that is what you are saying, how can anyone believe you would have any idea if you have been hacked by someone else?

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“your initial conclusions must have missed the part about YOU HAVING BEEN HACKED YOU MORON!”

All signs point toward this not being true. Instead, it appears that this was an inside job, not a hack.

However, their initial conclusions must have missed the part about how everyone who possesses these keys can decrypt the voice communications on cell phones and listen in.

Dan J. (profile) says:

Re: Having Been Hacked

To be clear, Gemal is claiming that the SIM keys were not compromised. They say that the hacking was of their office network and that the sim keys were not stored on that network at all, and that there is no evidence that the hackers breached the internal network where the keys are stored. They may very well be lying, but their claim is not that someone else having the data is harmless; they’re saying no one else has the data.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

“Can it in the long term can it keep its stock price up without keeping its user secure?”

Long term? In the long term the people making this decision are running other companies and whoever is left holding the bag at the point their decisions come home to roost gets to golden parachute out of that situation.

Basically the only people at Gemalto who stand to be personally affected didn’t have a say in the first place.

hurrah for dysfunctional organization structures.

gordwait (profile) says:

Were they ordered not to speak about it?

With this “new world” we’ve found ourselves, how many other software packages we let autoupdate have government ordered spyware installed in them?

Oracle has sure been pushing out a lot of Java updates,
how do we know we can trust them?
They may be under a national security order not to talk about any “special features”…

Turns out the tinfoil hat gang was right..

Anonymous Coward says:

Only air-to-basestation keys, not end-to-end

Why are investors so gullible to think that the NSA can be stopped by the encryption power offered by a SIM card?

The SIM card encryption only protects the radio signal between the phone and the nearby base station. The signal between the base stations is most likely to be unencrypted as these are leased lines from transit providers where normal people don’t have access to.

NSA doesn’t need to go nearby a user to record the airwaves as they can do it with access to every transit router from the comfy chairs in Virginia and Utah.

Telephone encryption has been a joke since its invention. It’s the Clipper Chip reincarnated.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Only air-to-basestation keys, not end-to-end

The SIM card hacking is for the Stingray devices or things like them.

Also the encryption system was designed to all tracking by the telcos for billing. Also for verifying that the phone and plan was legitimately activated so the user couldn’t get free calls like land lines and the phreak boxes. This is why end-to-end encryption is still better for everyone.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Only air-to-basestation keys, not end-to-end

NSA doesn’t need to go nearby a user to record the airwaves as they can do it with access to every transit router from the comfy chairs in Virginia and Utah.

There’s always a good number of GSM security videos from the Chaos Communication Congress, and I’m under the same impression: the systems aren’t that secure. So it’s kind of amazing that the NSA et al. feel the need to hack SIMs in the first place. Just because they can, I guess. Maybe someone was bored.

Zero Knowledge Systems had a way to bill for anonymous network access 10 years ago. Combine that with Tor hidden services and you’d have a way for a telco to ring a phone without having to know its location. A SIM, of course, could generate its keys on first use. It’ll be interesting to see if anyone actually redesigns these systems.

Dave Cortright says:

The stock change looks more like market noise to me

I took a look at Gemalto’s stock price over the past year, and noticed it was in the mid-$80s a year ago, and dropped to below $60 4 months ago. The blip from $73 to $67, which then trended back up to $70 looks like minor fluctuations compared to the macro trend.

So it seems that investors initially overreacted to the news (as it seems they always do), and then it corrected. It doesn’t look like they care too much about this news. Should they? Are they seriously going to lose business because of this? Does anyone seriously think that the NSA won’t simply hack any other SIM card provider?

Anonymous Coward says:

So basically just another, if its not affecting our profit its not a problem, its a feature……..thankyou gemalto you’ve told us exactly were you stand……..excuse me while i memorise a companies name i had no reason to before

Gemalto, sim card and other, company, hacked, exploited, didnt give a shit……..gemalto sim cards and other, company, hacked, exploited, didnt give a shit…..was it a swedish company…….ill look that up one day, gemalto, sim card and other, company, hacked exploited, didnt give a fuck

Lenovo/spyfish………..

gramsa49 says:

Culpability

I did not see any thinking along these lines, but some, if not most, of the culpability, given the circumstances, should lie with the party that reissued these devices. They were the party with both and end user agreement and an assumed technologial liability. The carriers should not have rested trust with a third partY for the privacy of another third party. There is way too much of this in corporate arenas.

New Boss says:

Stage One - Denial?

Seems like they are in stage one of grief, DENIAL. In the days that follow:
ANGER – Upon thorough security assessment, how dare they! EU protect us!
BARGAINING – international spy agencies, please don’t. We know, “Eye of Sauron” and all but this is really cramping our business style. Promise you won’t make us look bad. Promise you won’t do it again.
DEPRESSION – they totally owned us, Sony 2.0, shit, shit, shit… Who will get fired? Our stock price, oh, our stock price.
ACCEPTANCE – This is going to happen. Hey, remaining customers, I’ll sell you new gear with new technology buzz words like “Perfect Forward Secrecy”, and SOME”open source”. Psst, hey super secret spy agency, we will sell you technology too. Sure you could break in and get it yourself, but we are wise to you now, and invested in some better locks, save some time and just buy it from us instead. Telecom network upgrade fees $$, good PR from secure technology, check, and dual $$ revenue stream for every product shipped.

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