Project

General

Profile

Download (17.5 KB) Statistics
| Branch: | Revision:
1
= Specification for IMSI Pseudonymization on the Radio Interface for 2G and Above
2

    
3
== Introduction
4

    
5
=== Protecting the IMSI on the Radio Interface is Desirable
6

    
7
A long-standing issue in the 3GPP specifications is, that mobile phones and
8
other mobile equipment (ME) have to send the International Mobile Subscriber
9
Identity (IMSI) unencrypted over the air. Each IMSI is uniquely identifying the
10
person who bought the associated Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) used in the
11
ME. Therefore most people can be uniquely identified by recording the IMSI that
12
their ME is sending. Efforts are made in the 2G and above specifications to
13
send the IMSI less often, by using the Temporary Mobile Subscriber Identity
14
(TMSI) where possible.
15

    
16
But this is not enough. So-called IMSI catchers were invented and are used to
17
not only record IMSIs when they have to be sent. But also to force ME to send
18
their IMSI by immitating a Base Transceiver Station (BTS). IMSI catchers have
19
become small and affordable, even criminals actors without much budget can use
20
them to track anybody with a mobile phone.
21

    
22
=== Summary of Proposed Solution
23

    
24
The solution presented in this document is to periodically change the IMSI of
25
the ME to a new pseudonymous IMSI allocated by the Home Location Register (HLR)
26
or Home Subscriber Service (HSS). The next pseudonymous IMSI is sent to the SIM
27
via Short Message Service (SMS), then a SIM applet overwrites the IMSI of the
28
SIM with the new value. The only component that needs to be changed in the
29
network besides the SIM is the HLR/HSS, therefore it should be possible even
30
for a Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) to deploy this privacy
31
enhancement.
32

    
33
=== Summary of Existing Location Updating Procedures in RAN and CN
34

    
35
The subscriber's SIM is provisioned with the IMSI and cryptographic keys of a
36
subscriber, after the subscriber was added with the same data to the HLR/HSS.
37
In the Remote Access Network (RAN), the IMSI is sent over the air interface and
38
then transmitted to the Core Network (CN), where it is validated by the
39
HLR/HSS. The involved components vary by the generation of the network and
40
whether the SIM is attempting a Circuit Switched (CS) or Packet Switched (PS)
41
connection, but the principle is the same. This document uses 2G CS Location
42
Updating for reference, as in <<figure-imsi-regular>>.
43

    
44
The IMSI is transmitted in the Location Updating Request from ME. The VLR
45
needs an authentication challenge specific to the secret keys on the SIM to
46
authenticate the SIM, and looks the authentication challenges up by the IMSI.
47
If the VLR does not have any more authentication challenges for the IMSI (as it
48
happens when the VLR sees the IMSI for the first time), the VLR requests new
49
authentication challenges from the HLR. Then the HLR verifies that the IMSI is
50
known and, if it is unknown, sends back an error that will terminate the
51
Location Updating procedure.
52

    
53
After the VLR found the authentication challenge, it authenticates the SIM, and
54
performs a Classmark Enquiry and Physical Channel Reconfiguration. Then the VLR
55
has the required information to finish the Location Updating, and continues
56
with Process Update_Location_HLR (3GPP TS 29.002). Afterwards, the VLR assigns
57
a new TMSI with the Location Updating Accept, which is acknowledged by the TMSI
58
Reallocation Complete. In following Location Updates with the same MSC, the ME
59
sends the TMSI instead of the IMSI in the Location Updating Request.
60

    
61
[[figure-imsi-regular]]
62
.Location Updating in 2G CS with IMSI
63
["mscgen"]
64
----
65
msc {
66
  hscale="1.75";
67
  ME [label="ME"], BTS [label="BTS"], BSC [label="BSC"], MSC [label="MSC/VLR"],
68
  HLR [label="HLR"];
69

    
70
  // BTS <=> BSC: RSL
71
  // BSC <=> MSC: BSSAP, RNSAP
72
  // MSC <=> HLR: MAP (process Update_Location_HLR, 3GPP TS 29.002)
73

    
74
  ME   => BTS [label="Location Updating Request"];
75
  BTS  => BSC [label="Location Updating Request"];
76
  BSC  => MSC [label="Location Updating Request"];
77

    
78
  --- [label="If necessary: VLR requests new authentication challenges for this IMSI"];
79
  MSC  => HLR [label="Send Auth Info Request"];
80
  MSC <=  HLR [label="Send Auth Info Result"];
81
  ---;
82

    
83
  BSC <=  MSC [label="Authentication Request"];
84
  BTS <=  BSC [label="Authentication Request"];
85
  ME  <=  BTS [label="Authentication Request"];
86
  ME   => BTS [label="Authentication Response"];
87
  BTS  => BSC [label="Authentication Response"];
88
  BSC  => MSC [label="Authentication Response"];
89
  BSC <=  MSC [label="Classmark Enquiry"];
90
  BTS <=  BSC [label="Classmark Enquiry"];
91
  ME  <=  BTS [label="Classmark Enquiry"];
92
  ME   => BTS [label="Classmark Change"];
93
  BTS  => BSC [label="Classmark Change"];
94
  BSC  => MSC [label="Classmark Update"];
95
  BSC <=  MSC [label="Physical Channel Reconfiguration"];
96
  BTS <=  BSC [label="Ciphering Mode Command"];
97
  ME  <=  BTS [label="Ciphering Mode Command"];
98
  ME   => BTS [label="Ciphering Mode Complete"];
99
  BTS  => BSC [label="Ciphering Mode Complete"];
100
  BSC  => MSC [label="Ciphering Mode Complete"];
101

    
102
  --- [label="Process Update_Location_HLR (3GPP TS 29.002)"];
103
  MSC  => HLR [label="Update Location Request"];
104
  MSC <=  HLR [label="Insert Subscriber Data Request"];
105
  MSC  => HLR [label="Insert Subscriber Data Result"];
106
  MSC <=  HLR [label="Update Location Result"];
107
  ---;
108

    
109
  BSC <=  MSC [label="Location Updating Accept"];
110
  BTS <=  BSC [label="Location Updating Accept"];
111
  ME  <=  BTS [label="Location Updating Accept"];
112
  ME   => BTS [label="TMSI Reallocation Complete"];
113
  BTS  => BSC [label="TMSI Reallocation Complete"];
114
  BSC  => MSC [label="TMSI Reallocation Complete"];
115
}
116
----
117

    
118
<<<
119
== Required Changes
120

    
121
[[hlr-imsi-pseudo-storage]]
122
=== Pseudonymous IMSI Storage in the HLR
123

    
124
The HLR must store up to two pseudonymous IMSIs (imsi_pseudo) and their related
125
counters (imsi_pseudo_i) per subscriber. Each subscriber initially has one
126
pseudonymous IMSI allocated. A subscriber has two valid pseudonymous IMSIs
127
only during the transition phase from the old pseudonymous IMSI to the new one.
128
The amount of available IMSIs must be higher than the amount of subscribers
129
registered with the HLR. If the amount of available IMSIs is too short, the HLR
130
can delay assigning new pseudonymous IMSIs until new IMSIs are available again.
131

    
132
.Examples for additional subscriber data in HLR
133
[options="header"]
134
|===
135
| Subscriber ID | imsi_pseudo | imsi_pseudo_i
136
// example IMSIs taken from Wikipedia
137
| 123
138
| 310150123456789
139
| 1
140

    
141
| 234
142
| 502130123456789
143
| 1
144

    
145
| 234
146
| 460001357924680
147
| 2
148
|===
149

    
150
==== imsi_pseudo
151

    
152
The value for imsi_pseudo is a random choice from the pool of available IMSIs
153
that the HLR controls. The pseudonymous IMSI must not be used by any subscriber
154
as pseudonymous IMSI yet, but may be the real IMSI of a subscriber.
155

    
156
[[hlr-imsi-pseudo-i]]
157
==== imsi_pseudo_i
158

    
159
The counter imsi_pseudo_i indicates how often a subscriber's pseudonymous IMSI
160
was changed. The value is 1 for the first allocated pseudonymous IMSI of a
161
subscriber. When allocating a new pseudonymous IMSI for the same subscriber,
162
the new imsi_pseudo_i value is increased by 1. The counter is used by the SIM
163
applet to detect and ignore outdated requests related to changing the
164
pseudonymous IMSI.
165

    
166
=== SIM Provisioning
167

    
168
The HLR is allocating a pseudonymous IMSI for the subscriber. This pseudonymous
169
IMSI is stored as IMSI on the subscriber's SIM instead of the real IMSI.
170

    
171
[[sim-app]]
172
==== SIM applet
173

    
174
The SIM is provisioned with a SIM applet, which is able to change the IMSI once
175
the next pseudonymous IMSI arrives from the HLR. A reference implementation is
176
provided in <<reference-src>>.
177

    
178
===== Counter Storage
179

    
180
The following counter variables are stored in the SIM applet.
181

    
182
[options="header",cols="20%,12%,68%"]
183
|===
184
| Name | Initial value | Description
185

    
186
| imsi_pseudo_i
187
| 1
188
| See <<hlr-imsi-pseudo-i>>.
189

    
190
| imsi_pseudo_lu
191
| 0
192
| Amount of Location Updating procedures done with the same pseudonymous IMSI.
193

    
194
| imsi_pseudo_lu_max
195
| (decided by operator)
196
| Maximum amount of Location Updating procedures done with the same
197
  pseudonymous IMSI, before the SIM applet shows a warning to the subscriber.
198
|===
199

    
200
===== Switch to Next Pseudonymous IMSI
201

    
202
The SIM applet registers to a suitable SMS trigger (3GPP TS 03.19, Section
203
6.2). When an SMS from the HLR in the structure of <<sms-structure>> arrives,
204
the applet must verify that the SMS is not outdated by comparing imsi_pseudo_i
205
from the SMS with the last imsi_pseudo_i that was used when changing the IMSI
206
(initially 1 as in <<hlr-imsi-pseudo-i>>). The new value must be higher,
207
otherwise the SMS should not be processed further.
208

    
209
The SIM applet registers a timer with min_sleep_time from the SMS. When the
210
timer triggers, the IMSI of the SIM is overwritten with the new pseudonymous
211
IMSI, the TMSI and GSM Ciphering key Kc (3GPP TS 31.102, Section 4.4.3.1) are
212
invalidated. The current imsi_pseudo_i from the SMS is stored in the SIM applet
213
to compare it with the next SMS. imsi_pseudo_lu is reset to 0. Afterwards,
214
the EF~IMSI~ changing procedure in 3GPP TS 11.14, Section 6.4.7.1 is executed
215
to apply the new IMSI.
216

    
217
// FIXME: do we need to enforce the LU now, with an arbitrary CM Service
218
// Request, or would this only be necessary for Osmocom? (OS#4404)
219

    
220
===== Warning the Subscriber If the Pseudonymous IMSI Does Not Change
221

    
222
An attacker could potentially block the next pseudonymous IMSI SMS on purpose.
223
Because the SIM applet cannot decide the next pseudonymous IMSI, it would have
224
the same pseudonymous IMSI for a long time. Then it could become feasible for
225
an attacker to track the subscriber by their pseudonymous IMSI. Therefore the
226
SIM applet should warn the subscriber if the pseudonymous IMSI does not change.
227

    
228
The SIM applet registers to EVENT_EVENT_DOWNLOAD_LOCATION_STATUS (3GPP TS
229
03.19, Section 6.2) and increases imsi_pseudo_lu by 1 when the event is
230
triggered. If imsi_pseudo_lu reaches imsi_pseudo_lu_max, the SIM applet
231
displays a warning to the subscriber.
232

    
233
[[process-update-location-hlr]]
234
=== Process Update_Location_HLR
235

    
236
All IMSI Pseudonymization related changes to Process Update_Location_HLR
237
(3GPP TS 29.002) are optional. Deviations from the existing specification that
238
are outlined in this section are expected to be enabled or disabled entirely
239
where IMSI pseudonymization is implemented.
240

    
241
[[figure-imsi-pseudo]]
242
.Process Update_Location_HLR with IMSI pseudonymization changes
243
["mscgen"]
244
----
245
msc {
246
  hscale="1.75";
247
  MSC [label="MSC/VLR"], SMSC [label="SMS-SC"], HLR [label="HLR"];
248

    
249
  MSC   => HLR  [label="Update Location Request"];
250

    
251
  --- [label="If new pseudonymous IMSI was used: deallocate and cancel old pseudonymous IMSI"];
252
  HLR  box HLR  [label="Deallocate old pseudonymous IMSI"];
253
  MSC  <=  HLR  [label="Cancel Location Request"];
254
  MSC   => HLR  [label="Cancel Location Result"];
255
  ---;
256

    
257
  MSC  <=  HLR  [label="Insert Subscriber Data Request"];
258
  MSC   => HLR  [label="Insert Subscriber Data Result"];
259
  HLR  box HLR  [label="Start Next_Pseudo_IMSI_Timer"];
260
  MSC  <=  HLR  [label="Update Location Result"];
261
  MSC  box MSC  [label="Finish Location Updating with ME"],
262

    
263
  HLR  box HLR  [label="Wait for Next_Pseudo_IMSI_Timer expiry"];
264
  |||;
265
  ...;
266
  |||;
267
  HLR  box HLR  [label="Next_Pseudo_IMSI_Timer expired"];
268

    
269
  HLR  box HLR  [label="\nAllocate new pseudonymous IMSI\nif subscriber has only one allocated\n"];
270
  SMSC <=  HLR  [label="Next Pseudonymous IMSI SMS"];
271
  SMSC box SMSC [label="Deliver SMS to ME"];
272
}
273
----
274

    
275
==== Update Location Request
276

    
277
When Update Location Request arrives, the HLR does not look up the subscriber
278
by the IMSI, but by the pseudonymous IMSI instead. Unless the subscriber has
279
two pseudonymous IMSI allocated and used the new pseudonymous IMSI in the
280
Update Location Request, this is followed by the existing logic to continue
281
with Insert Subscriber Data Request.
282

    
283
===== Update Location Request With New Pseudonymous IMSI
284

    
285
If the subscriber has two pseudonymous IMSIs allocated, and the newer entry was
286
used (higher imsi_pseudo_i, see <<hlr-imsi-pseudo-i>>), this section applies.
287
The older pseudonymous IMSI is deallocated in the HLR. This is done as early
288
as possible, so the timeframe where two pseudonymous IMSI are allocated for one
289
subscriber is short.
290

    
291
A Cancel Location Request with the old pseudonymous IMSI is sent to the VLR, so
292
the conflicting subscriber entry with the old pseudonymous IMSI is deleted from
293
the VLR. Receiving a Cancel Location Result is followed by the existing logic
294
to continue with Insert Subscriber Data Request.
295

    
296
===== Update Location Request With Old Pseudonymous IMSI
297

    
298
If the subscriber has two pseudonymous IMSIs allocated, and the older entry was
299
used (lower imsi_pseudo_i, see <<hlr-imsi-pseudo-i>>), the newer entry is _not_
300
deallocated. This could lock out the subscriber from the network if the SMS
301
with the new pseudonymous IMSI arrives with a delay.
302

    
303
==== Insert Subscriber Data Result
304

    
305
When Insert Subscriber Data Result arrives, a subscriber specific
306
Next_Pseudo_IMSI_Timer starts.
307

    
308
==== Next_Pseudo_IMSI_Timer Expires
309

    
310
If the subscriber has only one pseudonymous IMSI allocated, and the amount of
311
available IMSIs in the HLR is high enough, a second pseudonymous IMSI and
312
related imsi_pseudo_i gets allocated for the subscriber (as described in
313
<<hlr-imsi-pseudo-storage>>).
314

    
315
If the subscriber still has only one pseudonymous IMSI, because not enough
316
IMSIs were available in the HLR, the process is aborted here and no SMS with
317
a next pseudonymous IMSI is sent to the subscriber. The subscriber will get a
318
new pseudonymous IMSI during the next Location Updating Procedure, if the HLR
319
has enough IMSIs available at that point.
320

    
321
An SMS is sent to the SMS - Service Centre (SMS-SC) with the newer pseudonymous
322
IMSI (higher imsi_pseudo_i, see <<hlr-imsi-pseudo-i>>) and related
323
imsi_pseudo_i value.
324

    
325
[[sms-structure]]
326
==== Next Pseudonymous IMSI SMS Structure
327

    
328
.Next pseudonymous IMSI SMS structure
329
[packetdiag]
330
----
331
{
332
	colwidth = 32
333

    
334
	0-31:	 IMSI_PSEUDO_I
335
	32-63:   MIN_SLEEP_TIME
336
	64-119:  IMSI_PSEUDO
337
	120-127: PAD
338
}
339
----
340

    
341
// FIXME
342
IMPORTANT: This is a draft. The structure is likely to change after the
343
reference implementation phase.
344

    
345
IMSI_PSEUDO_I: 32 bits::
346
See <<hlr-imsi-pseudo-i>>.
347

    
348
MIN_SLEEP_TIME: 32 bits::
349
Amount of seconds, which the SIM applet should wait before changing to the new
350
pseudonymous IMSI. Since it is unclear when the SMS will arrive (ME might be
351
turned off), this is a minimum amount.
352

    
353
IMSI_PSEUDO: 60 bits::
354
Telephony Binary Coded Decimal (TBCD, 3GPP TS 29.002) version of the next
355
pseudonymous IMSI.
356

    
357
PAD: 8 bits::
358
Padding at the end, should be filled with 1111 as in the TBCD specification.
359

    
360
== Error Scenarios
361

    
362
=== Next Pseudonymous IMSI SMS is Lost
363

    
364
If the SMS with the next pseudonymous IMSI does not arrive, the SIM will start
365
the next Location Updating Procedure with the old pseudonymous IMSI. Because
366
the HLR has both the old and the new pseudonymous IMSI allocated at this point,
367
the subscriber is not locked out of the network.
368

    
369
=== Next Pseudonymous IMSI SMS arrives out of order
370

    
371
The next pseudonymous IMSI SMS may arrive out of order. Either, because the
372
network is not able to deliver them in order, or even because an attacker would
373
perform a replay attack.
374

    
375
If the SMS arrives out of order, the imsi_pseudo_i counter will not be higher
376
than the value the SIM applet (<<sim-app>>) has stored. Therefore, the applet
377
will discard the message and the subscriber is not locked out of the network.
378

    
379
// === SMS Arrives Before Timer Expires
380
// FIXME: OS#4486
381

    
382
== Recommendations for Real-World Implementations
383

    
384
=== BCCH SI3: ATT = 0
385

    
386
When changing from one pseudonymous IMSI to the next, it is important that the
387
ME does not detach from the network. Otherwise it would be trivial for an
388
attacker to correlate the detach with the attach of the same ME with the next
389
pseudonymous IMSI.
390

    
391
This is controlled with the ATT flag in the SYSTEM INFORMATION TYPE 3 (SI3)
392
message on the Broadcast Control Channel (BCCH), see 3GPP TS 44.018 Section
393
10.5.2.11. It must be set to 0.
394

    
395
// FIXME: verify how it set with operators in germany (OS#4404)
396

    
397
=== End to End Encryption of SMS
398

    
399
When deploying the IMSI pseudonymization, the operator should make sure that
400
the next pseudonymous IMSI SMS (<<sms-structure>>) cannot be read or modified
401
by third parties. Otherwise, the next pseudonymous IMSI is leaked, and if the
402
pseudonymous IMSI in the SMS was changed, the SIM would be locked out of the
403
network.
404

    
405
The safest way to protect the next pseudonymous IMSI SMS is a layer of end to
406
end encryption from the HLR to the SIM. It was considered for this
407
specification, but found to be out of scope.
408

    
409
=== User-configurable Minimum Duration Between IMSI Changes
410

    
411
It may be desirable to let subscribers configure their minimum duration between
412
IMSI changes. This allows subscribers with a high privacy requirement to switch
413
their pseudonymous IMSI more often, and it allows the pseudonymous IMSI change
414
to happen less frequently if it is distracting to the subscriber.
415

    
416
How distracting the pseudonymous IMSI change is, depends on the ME. The
417
following examples were observed:
418

    
419
// FIXME: might need an update after SYS#4481
420

    
421
* A Samsung GT-I9100 Galaxy SII smartphone with Android 4.0.3 displays a
422
  message at the bottom of the screen for about 5 seconds, but the user
423
  interface remains usable.
424
* A Samsung GT-E1200 feature phone displays a waiting screen for 16 to 17
425
  seconds and is unusable during that time.
426

    
427
[[reference-src]]
428
== Reference Implementation with Source Code
429

    
430
A reference implementation for the SIM applet (<<sim-app>>) is available in
431
source code under the Apache-2.0 license at:
432

    
433
https://osmocom.org/projects/imsi-pseudo
434

    
435
The HLR modifications described in <<hlr-imsi-pseudo-storage>> and
436
<<process-update-location-hlr>> were implemented for reference in OsmoHLR from
437
the Osmocom project, licensed under AGPL-3.0. Information about the source code
438
and related branches for IMSI pseudonymization can be found at the above URL as
439
well.
440

    
441
<<<
442
include::./common/chapters/gfdl.adoc[]
(3-3/5)
Add picture from clipboard (Maximum size: 48.8 MB)