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Huawei Could Eavesdrop on 6.5 Million Dutch Cellphone Users Without their Knowledge

dimanche 16 mai 2021, 20:34 , par Slashdot
'Chinese technology provider Huawei was recently accused of being able to monitor all calls made using Dutch mobile operator KPN,' writes the Conversation. Long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 shares their report:

The revelations are from a secret 2010 report made by consultancy firm Capgemini, which KPN commissioned to evaluate the risks of working with Huawei infrastructure. While the full report on the issue has not been made public, journalists reporting on the story have outlined specific concerns that Huawei personnel in the Netherlands and China had access to security-essential parts of KPN's network - including the call data of millions of Dutch citizens - and that a lack of records meant KPN couldn't establish how often this happened... KPN essentially granted Huawei 'administrator rights' to its mobile network by outsourcing work to the Chinese firm.

Legislation is only now catching up to prevent similar vulnerabilities in telecoms security...

Lower revenues force operators to carefully manage costs. This means that operators have been keen to outsource parts of their businesses to third parties, especially since the late 2000s. Large numbers of highly skilled engineers are an expensive liability to have on the balance sheet, and can often appear underused when things are running smoothly..., outsourcing by mobile operators is widespread. And firms in the UK and across Europe have often turned to Huawei to provide IT services and to help build core networks.

In 2010, Huawei was managing security-critical functions of KPN's core network.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.
rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/N718GCwVikM/huawei-could-eavesdrop-on-65-million-dutch-cell...
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