Difference between revisions of "SIM hacks"

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m (Reports of SIM Hacks for 3G)
m (Old Exploit)
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Should you not apply tape beforehand, you can still eject the simtray with an L-shaped pin and a quick but forceful yank. It sounds scary but it's just plastic, after all.
 
Should you not apply tape beforehand, you can still eject the simtray with an L-shaped pin and a quick but forceful yank. It sounds scary but it's just plastic, after all.
   
==Exploit==
+
==Old Exploit==
 
This relies on the fact that the IMSI is read twice, once to validate the IMSI and once to connect to the network. So the SIM card spoofs the first IMSI read to trick the device into thinking it is operating on the AT&T network, or whatever network the device is locked to. The second time it allows the IMSI to be read properly from the sim card. That is the IMSI sent to the network.
 
This relies on the fact that the IMSI is read twice, once to validate the IMSI and once to connect to the network. So the SIM card spoofs the first IMSI read to trick the device into thinking it is operating on the AT&T network, or whatever network the device is locked to. The second time it allows the IMSI to be read properly from the sim card. That is the IMSI sent to the network.
   

Revision as of 13:19, 28 July 2008

These hacks all require a SIM card passthrough to be used. Some examples are the TurboSIM, the XSim, and the SuperSIM.

WARNING

The iPhone 3G sim tray is very very thin. If using SIM hacks (dual sim, etc.) a long thin tape should be attached in a way that you can easily extract the sim tray without relying on the normal tiny sim ejector button. You have been warned.

Should you not apply tape beforehand, you can still eject the simtray with an L-shaped pin and a quick but forceful yank. It sounds scary but it's just plastic, after all.

Old Exploit

This relies on the fact that the IMSI is read twice, once to validate the IMSI and once to connect to the network. So the SIM card spoofs the first IMSI read to trick the device into thinking it is operating on the AT&T network, or whatever network the device is locked to. The second time it allows the IMSI to be read properly from the sim card. That is the IMSI sent to the network.

A slight variant of this exploit uses a silvercard to program the IMSI and ICCID differently. This variant requires your Ki to be known, which can only be extracted from COMPEMU v1 sim cards.

Reports of SIM Hacks for 3G

Yessim/ Furiousim: Conflicting reports on whether this works.

iPhonix/Juma: MacBug.de reports only 2G mode works with this.

TurboSim: The author nvidia2008 describes Turbo Sim on the iPhone 3G White 16GB not working in the UK.