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by MustardTiger
3631 days ago
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But the phone company requires ID and bank info to obtain a premium number. And then when you do this, google calls them to complain, and phone company terminates your account, keeps the money, and reports you to the police for fraud. Doesn't seem like a very good exploit. |
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The cases of telecom fraud that I know of that were caught are usually due to incredible arrogance on the perpetrator's fault. In one case, he actually called the company he was attacking to gloat that they could never get him. (The company used a super-vulnerable-yet-expensive switch that literally had bugs like "&admin=1 gets superuser".) I've not seen a VoIP system that was remotely secure.