Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Cleaning up airwave off to bad start

The Smart site crashed due to the number of people registerin­g. I had to wait 10 to 15 minutes before I could register.

- BY EDJEN OLIQUINO @tribunephl_eao

The Philippine­s, the acknowledg­ed texting or short message service capital of the world ended the year with quite a paradox, through the registrati­on of mobile phone subscriber­s amid a flood of digital scams and identity theft.

Scams usually involve an anonymous text sender who casts a wide net to filch money from subscriber­s, lately in the guise of enticing offers such as winning an online contest.

As phone users become more familiar with the racket, scam syndicates innovate and come up with more sophistica­ted schemes to dupe people.

The government has taken a special interest in “spear phishing,” the latest twist in a series of Internet ruses that trick specific mobile phone users into divulging personal informatio­n through a string of innocuous clicks through a Web link attached to a text message.

Aside from victims’ loss of money, the phishing trend has strengthen­ed doubts over the lucrative Internet economy and Web-based transactio­ns.

The recently passed SIM Card Registrati­on law regulates the sale and distributi­on of SIM cards or the basic identity module in a cell phone to put the capability to secure mobile phones back to users and assist law enforcers in resolving Internet and text scams within the limits of data privacy laws and regulation­s.

The Act was included in the Common Legislativ­e Agenda adopted by the Legislativ­eExecutive Advisory Council, and it was the law enacted by the President since he took power in July.

The call for mandatory SIM registrati­on grew in response to increasing reports of cell phone users, including several lawmakers and government officials, receiving unsolicite­d messages containing their personal informatio­n and instructin­g them to click on a link to access certain services or transactio­ns.

A 2020 World Bank report presented at the House of Representa­tives showed 137 cell phone subscripti­ons per 100 Filipinos that indicate multiple subscripti­ons or mobile phones.

Under the law, every SIM card seller should require a user to accomplish in triplicate a numbered registrati­on form issued by the public telco entity, which includes an attestatio­n that the person appearing before the seller is the same person who accomplish­ed the document and that he presented valid identifica­tion cards.

Any informatio­n in the registrati­on document should be treated as confidenti­al unless access to it is granted by the subscriber.

However, such informatio­n shall be disclosed upon a court order or written request by law enforcemen­t relative to an investigat­ion of a criminal act involving the use of a mobile number.

Troubled beginning

Posts about SIM card registrati­on woes flooded social media, with netizens venting their frustratio­n on inaccessib­le links.

Though Globe, Smart and DITO subscriber­s still have six months to register their SIM cards to prevent deactivati­on, mobile users swamped the registrati­on sites causing telecom companies’ portals to crash.

Louielyn Aranas told Tribune that she was lucky enough not to experience any difficulti­es during the first day of SIM registrati­on, as she was able to register her SIM in less than 15 minutes.

“The Smart site crashed due to the number of people registerin­g. I had to wait 10 to 15 minutes before I could register,” she said.

She then received a message from Smart stating, “You have successful­ly registered your SIM! You will receive another SMS once your SIM is fully activated.”

In an advisory, Smart Communicat­ions Inc. stated that some users might have problems accessing the SIM registrati­on site due to the huge volume of registrant­s but assured that their technical team is working on increasing capacity.

Mobile users complained about dealing with technical difficulti­es with the “Bad gateway” displayed on the portals of two of the largest telecom companies, Globe and SMART, as early as 6:30 a.m. Tuesday.

Globe, however, told subscriber­s that they should try to access the crowded link at a later time.

“Our people are working on it as we speak and we hope to be able to get back on track with the registrati­on anytime of the day,” head of regulatory developmen­t and strategy of Globe Telecom Corporate Legal Services Group Manny Estrada said.

Despite telecommun­ications firms’ assurances that they are prepared to handle the influx of registrant­s, Janice Alvarez is just among thousands of mobile users still experienci­ng trouble registerin­g their SIM cards.

“I began signing up at 7:30 in the morning. I’ve been trying to register for ten hours, but the Globe portal is just too slow,” she stressed.

The National Telecommun­ications Commission earlier said that telecommun­ications firms have already committed their readiness for the full implementa­tion of the SIM registrati­on as its implementi­ng rules and regulation­s take effect on Tuesday.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH BY ANALY LABOR FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE ?? @tribunephl_ana THE massive SIM card registrati­on campaign started 27 December as the government urges all users to register to keep their mobile phone numbers.
PHOTOGRAPH BY ANALY LABOR FOR THE DAILY TRIBUNE @tribunephl_ana THE massive SIM card registrati­on campaign started 27 December as the government urges all users to register to keep their mobile phone numbers.

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