Not their job. A phone number is not a general ID or a security token. It is just a short number made up by a phone company for the purpose of using that company to call or text. If other companies or people try to use it for something different that is their stupid problem.https://twitter.com/mat/status/1167605500919173120 …
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I feel very strongly in the other direction. If SIM cards are not meant to be protected, then data shouldn’t be offered in the first place. Setting people up for failure. Agree to disagree (Terpin sued ATT for this exact problem and won)
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From the FCC - they are not protecting customer data, which they are by law/regulation required to do. You are supposed to show government issued ID when presented personal information of a customer - SIM Swaps either get around that, or are coercing employees (mostly kiosks).pic.twitter.com/biak8dfQPR
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Laws and regulation don't trump the reality of how security works. If a law requires a food company to send their bread to the moon to be blessed by moon beams for a week before can they sell it in stores, either the food company will break the law or you won't get any bread.
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Either way, no law however badly you want it or how strongly it is enforced it is going to help you get a loaf of bread blessed by moon beams that costs less than its multi-million dollar ride to and from the moon.
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Then how are moon pies so cheap?
End of conversation
New conversation -
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You act like we have monopolistic power structures that we must accept? Why should the providers not compete for these customers who clearly would choose the provider who gives them more security?
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