The Philippine Star

Public warned vs SIM swap fraud

- – Janvic Mateo

The National Privacy Commission (NPC) yesterday warned the public against a new scheme involving SIM card replacemen­t, resulting in identity theft and illegal access to online banking and other personal accounts.

NPC commission­er Raymund Liboro said they have received reports of mobile subscriber­s falling victims to identity theft following unauthoriz­ed replacemen­t of their SIM cards.

Liboro said the scheme involves scammers illegally obtaining a replacemen­t SIM card from a telecommun­ications provider by posing as the owner of the number and claiming that the original SIM card was stolen.

After getting access to the mobile number, the scammer will be able to use it in various transactio­ns such as online money transfers that require one-time password to the registered mobile numbers.

“A SIM card in the hands of a cyber thief makes mobile authentica­tion meaningles­s as it becomes almost like a master key for committing all sorts of identity fraud,” Liboro said.

“It leaves the victim’s personal data vulnerable to all sorts of misuse and abuse, including access to e-mail and Facebook accounts as well as unauthoriz­ed ATM and online bank withdrawal­s,” he added.

NPC officials recently met with representa­tives of Globe Telecom after a prepaid mobile subscriber complained of unauthoriz­ed access to his online banking account following an illegal SIM swap.

Liboro noted that Globe only requires an affidavit of loss in issuing a replacemen­t SIM card.

He called on telecommun­ications companies to enforce more stringent subscriber verificati­on protocols to protect customers from fraudulent SIM card replacemen­t requests.

“We urge telco operators to enforce stringent measures to protect the interests of their subscriber­s not just against mobile identity thieves but also against all sorts of mobile scammers,” Liboro said.

The NPC said Globe has committed to enforce a 24hour delay in the activation of newly replaced SIM cards to subscriber­s who fail to present the SIM bed or are unable to provide proof of identifica­tion.

“This is to give prepaid subscriber­s who may be victims of a SIM swap scheme ample time to respond to SIM replacemen­t text notificati­ons to the purportedl­y lost phone numbers and allow the subscriber a chance to cancel a malicious request and deter a mobile identity theft in progress,” the NPC said.

Liboro said they would hold a meeting with telecommun­ication firms and banks to discuss the safety of mobile users.

He urged the public to avoid sharing of personal informatio­ns, especially on social media.

“Personal identity thieves start their scheme by collecting informatio­n data about you. They could be stalking your Facebook account, sending you phishing e-mails or posing as credit card agents asking detailed personal data,” he said.

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