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Man who stole $5M in cryptocurrency via SIM swap pleads guilty
lundi 4 février 2019, 20:20 , par Ars Technica
Enlarge (credit: Chatsimo / Getty Images)
A 20-year-old Massachusetts man who recently accepted a plea deal with prosecutors in Santa Clara County, California, is believed to be the first person in the US to be convicted of SIM swapping. The SIM swapping technique allows a person to fool a mobile carrier into transferring someone else’s number to them—thus enabling possible account hijacking or other password resets that rely on the phone number itself as an authentication device. According to Vice Motherboard, which first reported the case, accused SIM swapper Joel Ortiz recently accepted a plea deal of 10 years—but it is not immediately clear which counts he pled guilty to. Last year, Ortiz faced a 28-count indictment outlining alleged violations involving a slew of computer crimes and violations of personal identifying information law. In a police report provided to Ars, Ortiz victimized at least 22 people nationwide, including one man named Seth Shapiro, who lost $1.7 million in cryptocurrency. Ortiz is believed to have stolen a total of around $5 million using this technique. Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments
https://arstechnica.com/?p=1451001
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ven. 22 nov. - 15:23 CET
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