37

It Might Be Possible To Build A Stingray With A Raspberry Pi

 5 years ago
source link: https://www.tuicool.com/articles/hit/uQ3a6ra
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.

If there’s one thing that’s making you insecure, it’s your smartphone. Your smartphone is constantly pinging the cell towers, giving out your location and potentially leaking your private information to anyone with a radio. This is the idea behind an IMSI catcher, or Stingray in common parlance, and now you too can build one with parts you can buy off of Amazon .

The key to this hack is a software defined radio dongle, or RTL-SDR, that has been repurposed to listen in on a GSM network. Literally the only hardware required is an RTL-SDR that can be bought online for less than fifteen dollars, and you can identify the IMSI, or unique ID linked to every SIM card, in smartphones around you. The only bit of software required is a small Python script from [Oros42], freely available on GitHub.

Of course, building an IMSI catcher with a desktop is of limited utility, and using a laptop is still a bit too bulky to surreptitiously conceal in a public location. No, to really get the bang for your buck out of this, you need to do this with a small single-board computer running off a battery pack. Luckily, [Joseph Cox] over at Motherboard reports, “It is likely possible” to run this on a Raspberry-Pi. The catch, of course, is that you’ll need to have Ubuntu running on the Raspberry-Pi to get this Python script going, but it is indeed possible to install Ubuntu on a Raspberry Pi . Of course, the current instructions for installing the key dependency involve  building gr-gsm from source, but then again, building an ISMI catcher from a Raspberry Pi is really only ‘likely possible’. If you can prove them right,drop us a line.


About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK