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GSM Security Overview (Part 1) Wireless telephone history
It all started like this First telephone (photophone) – Alexander Bell, 1880 The first car mounted radio  telephone – 1921
Going further 1946 – First commercial mobile radio-telephone service by Bell and AT&T in Saint Louis, USA. Half duplex(PTT) 1973 – First handheld cellular phone – Motorola. First cellular net  Bahrein 1978
But what’s cellular? HLR, VLR, AC, EIR MSC PSTN BS
Cellular principles Frequency reuse – same frequency in many cell sites Cellular expansion – easy to add new cells  Handover – moving between cells Roaming between networks
Generation Gap Generation #1 – Analog [routines for sending voice]  All systems are incompatible No international roaming Little capacity – cannot accommodate masses of subscribers
Generation Gap(2) Generation #2 – digital [voice encoding] Increased capacity More security Compatibility Can use TDMA or CDMA   for increasing capacity
TDMA Time Division Multiple Access Each channel is divided into timeslots, each conversation uses one timeslot. Many conversations are multiplexed into a single channel.  Used in GSM
CDMA Code Division Multiple Access All users share the same frequency all the time! To pick out the signal of specific user, this signal is modulated with a unique code sequence.
Back to Generations Generation #2.5 – packet-switching Connection to the internet is paid by packets and not by connection time. Connection to internet is cheaper and faster [up to 56KBps] The service name is GPRS – General Packet Radio Services
The future is now Generation #3  Permanent web connection at 2Mbps  Internet, phone and media: 3 in 1 The standard based on GSM is called UMTS. Not yet implemented. The EDGE standard is the development of GSM towards 3G.
GSM More than 800 million end users in 190 countries and representing over 70% of today's digital wireless market. source: GSM Association Israel Orange uses GSM Pelephone and Cellcom are about to use GSM
GSM Overview
Into the architecture Mobile phone is identified by SIM card. Key feature of the GSM Has the “secret” for authentication
Into the architecture(2) BTS – houses the radiotransceivers of the cell and handles the radio-link protocols with the mobile BSC – manages radio resources (channel setup, handover) for one or more BTSs
Into the architecture(3) MSC – Mobile Switching Center The central component of the network Like a telephony switch plus everything for a mobile subscriber: registration, authentication, handovers, call routing, connection to fixed networks. Each switch handles dozens of cells
Into the architecture(4) HLR – database of all users + current location.  One per network VLR – database of users + roamers  in some geographic area. Caches the HLR EIR – database of valid equipment AuC – Database of users’ secret keys
More GSM GSM comes in three flavors(frequency  bands): 900, 1800, 1900 MHz. 900 is the Orange flavour in Israel. Voice is digitized using Full-Rate coding. 20 ms sample => 260 bits . 13 Kbps bitrate
Sharing GSM uses TDMA and FDMA to let everybody talk. FDMA: 25MHz freq. is divided into 124 carrier frequencies. Each base station gets few of those. TDMA: Each carrier frequency is divided into bursts [0.577 ms]. 8 bursts are a frame.
Channels The physical channel in GSM is the timeslot.  The logical channel is the information which goes through the physical ch. Both user data and signaling are logical channels.
Channels(2) User data is carried on the traffic channel (TCH) , which is defined as 26 TDMA frames.  There are lots of control channels for signaling, base station to mobile, mobile to base station (“aloha” to request network access)
SS7 Signaling protocol for networks Packet – switching [like IP] GSM uses SS7 for communication between HLR and VLR (allowing roaming) and other advanced capabilities. GSM’s protocol which sits on top of SS7 is MAP – mobile application part

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Intro To GSM

  • 1. GSM Security Overview (Part 1) Wireless telephone history
  • 2. It all started like this First telephone (photophone) – Alexander Bell, 1880 The first car mounted radio telephone – 1921
  • 3. Going further 1946 – First commercial mobile radio-telephone service by Bell and AT&T in Saint Louis, USA. Half duplex(PTT) 1973 – First handheld cellular phone – Motorola. First cellular net Bahrein 1978
  • 4. But what’s cellular? HLR, VLR, AC, EIR MSC PSTN BS
  • 5. Cellular principles Frequency reuse – same frequency in many cell sites Cellular expansion – easy to add new cells Handover – moving between cells Roaming between networks
  • 6. Generation Gap Generation #1 – Analog [routines for sending voice] All systems are incompatible No international roaming Little capacity – cannot accommodate masses of subscribers
  • 7. Generation Gap(2) Generation #2 – digital [voice encoding] Increased capacity More security Compatibility Can use TDMA or CDMA for increasing capacity
  • 8. TDMA Time Division Multiple Access Each channel is divided into timeslots, each conversation uses one timeslot. Many conversations are multiplexed into a single channel. Used in GSM
  • 9. CDMA Code Division Multiple Access All users share the same frequency all the time! To pick out the signal of specific user, this signal is modulated with a unique code sequence.
  • 10. Back to Generations Generation #2.5 – packet-switching Connection to the internet is paid by packets and not by connection time. Connection to internet is cheaper and faster [up to 56KBps] The service name is GPRS – General Packet Radio Services
  • 11. The future is now Generation #3 Permanent web connection at 2Mbps Internet, phone and media: 3 in 1 The standard based on GSM is called UMTS. Not yet implemented. The EDGE standard is the development of GSM towards 3G.
  • 12. GSM More than 800 million end users in 190 countries and representing over 70% of today's digital wireless market. source: GSM Association Israel Orange uses GSM Pelephone and Cellcom are about to use GSM
  • 14. Into the architecture Mobile phone is identified by SIM card. Key feature of the GSM Has the “secret” for authentication
  • 15. Into the architecture(2) BTS – houses the radiotransceivers of the cell and handles the radio-link protocols with the mobile BSC – manages radio resources (channel setup, handover) for one or more BTSs
  • 16. Into the architecture(3) MSC – Mobile Switching Center The central component of the network Like a telephony switch plus everything for a mobile subscriber: registration, authentication, handovers, call routing, connection to fixed networks. Each switch handles dozens of cells
  • 17. Into the architecture(4) HLR – database of all users + current location. One per network VLR – database of users + roamers in some geographic area. Caches the HLR EIR – database of valid equipment AuC – Database of users’ secret keys
  • 18. More GSM GSM comes in three flavors(frequency bands): 900, 1800, 1900 MHz. 900 is the Orange flavour in Israel. Voice is digitized using Full-Rate coding. 20 ms sample => 260 bits . 13 Kbps bitrate
  • 19. Sharing GSM uses TDMA and FDMA to let everybody talk. FDMA: 25MHz freq. is divided into 124 carrier frequencies. Each base station gets few of those. TDMA: Each carrier frequency is divided into bursts [0.577 ms]. 8 bursts are a frame.
  • 20. Channels The physical channel in GSM is the timeslot. The logical channel is the information which goes through the physical ch. Both user data and signaling are logical channels.
  • 21. Channels(2) User data is carried on the traffic channel (TCH) , which is defined as 26 TDMA frames. There are lots of control channels for signaling, base station to mobile, mobile to base station (“aloha” to request network access)
  • 22. SS7 Signaling protocol for networks Packet – switching [like IP] GSM uses SS7 for communication between HLR and VLR (allowing roaming) and other advanced capabilities. GSM’s protocol which sits on top of SS7 is MAP – mobile application part