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T-Mobile hacker says the carrier’s security is ‘awful’

Failure to comply with T-Mobile client data may not have been a sophisticated data gap, in fact, it could have been relatively trivial. The hacker who claims to be responsible for the attack, John Binns, told Wall Street Journal in a discussion that T-Mobile’s safety was “horrible”. Reportedly, Binns broke using a tool easily available to find an exposed router, and took a week to deepen through the customer data stored in a data center near East Wenatchee, Washington.

Binns, who provided apparent evidence to support the participation claims of him, said he broke T-Mobile and stole the data to create “noise” that caught his attention. He came forward to highlight the affirmations of him he had been kidnapped in Germany and had put in a false mental hospital. There was no evidence to support that accusation.

T-Mobile declined to comment on Binns’ claims in response to the magazine. He previously declared that he was “confident”, he had closed the safety holes used in the rape, which compromised confidential information for more than 54 million active and previous customers.

The incident is the third violation in two years, and suggests that T-Mobile is still struggling to offer security that matches its rapidly growing customer base. He only hired a new security leader in 2021, for example. However, if Binns’ affirmations are precise, however, the facility of the attack is also terrifying, it only took an informal trick to put tens of millions of people at risk of fraud and other data crimes. It is possible that the company needs to fight if you are going to reassure customers that the infractions will be rare in the future.

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