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Speaking of the actual story, how come they put all of this effort into unmasking this guy, discussing the consequences of his actions to the integrity of democracies... but then he says "I hack into Telegram accounts by using an SS7 vulnerability", and they just copy and paste that verbatim into the story, not even bothering to explain it in the slightest? Obviously it's because they themselves don't know what it means, so it just gets filtered by their brain as nonsense tech words. But is it really that hard for them to reach out to a tech person and ask them "hey, what does it mean that they use an SS7 vulnerability to hack into Telegram accounts?", so that they can explain "Oh, that means they're impersonating your phone number, so that when Telegram sends you an SMS to verify that it's you, they receive that SMS on your behalf and can log in to your Telegram account"? It baffles me, because it would take so little effort for them to provide this additional context into how the actual hacking is done, in a way that is understandable and interesting for the average non-tech person, and yet... they just don't bother to? Somehow this seems to only be acceptable for tech stuff. If when they found out that this guy was involved in the Nigerian elections, the reporter shrugged and said "Huh, Nigeria. I wonder what a Nigeria is. Anyway, not worth Googling it or checking whether it has any relevance to the story whatsoever" then everyone would agree he's doing a disservice to the story and to the public. Yet somehow this is routinely done with technical terms, the public is worse off because basic things are hidden to them behind inscrutable acronyms by lazy reporters, and no one bats an eye. |
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/apr/19/ss7-hack-...