At a Congressional hearing earlier this week, Matt Blaze made the point that
CALEA, the 1994 law that forces telecoms to make phone calls wiretappable, is
outdated in today’s threat environment and should be rethought:
> In other words, while the legally-mandated CALEA capability requirements have
> changed little over the last three decades, the infrastructure that must
> implement and protect it has changed radically. This has greatly expanded the
> “attack surface” that must be defended to prevent unauthorized wiretaps,
> especially at scale. The job of the illegal eavesdropper has gotten
> significantly easier, with many more options and opportunities for them to
> exploit. Compromising our telecommunications infrastructure is now little
> different from performing any other kind of computer intrusion or data breach,
> a well-known and endemic cybersecurity problem. To put it bluntly, something
> like Salt Typhoon was inevitable, and will likely happen again unless
> significant changes are made...
Tag - telecom
The US government has identified a ninth telecom that was successfully hacked by
Salt Typhoon.