Skip to content

Secure IT

Stay Secure. Stay Informed.

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Sources
    • Krebs On Security
    • Security Week
    • The Hacker News
    • Schneier On Security
  • Home
  • The Hacker News
  • eSIM Vulnerability in Kigen’s eUICC Cards Exposes Billions of IoT Devices to Malicious Attacks
  • The Hacker News

eSIM Vulnerability in Kigen’s eUICC Cards Exposes Billions of IoT Devices to Malicious Attacks

[email protected] The Hacker News Published: July 14, 2025 | Updated: July 14, 2025 3 min read
0 views

Jul 14, 2025Ravie LakshmananMobile Security / Vulnerability

eSIM Vulnerability

Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a new hacking technique that exploits weaknesses in the eSIM technology used in modern smartphones, exposing users to severe risks.

The issues impact the Kigen eUICC card. According to the Irish company’s website, more than two billion SIMs in IoT devices have been enabled as of December 2020.

The findings come from Security Explorations, a research lab of AG Security Research company. Kigen awarded the company a $30,000 bounty for their report.

An eSIM, or embedded SIM, is a digital SIM card that’s embedded directly into a device as software installed onto an Embedded Universal Integrated Circuit Card (eUICC) chip.

Cybersecurity

eSIMs allow users to activate a cellular plan from a carrier without the need for a physical SIM card. eUICC software offers the ability to change operator profiles, remote provisioning, and management of SIM profiles.

“The eUICC card makes it possible to install the so-called eSIM profiles into the target chip,” Security Explorations said. “eSIM profiles are software representations of mobile subscriptions.”

According to an advisory released by Kigen, the vulnerability is rooted in the GSMA TS.48 Generic Test Profile, versions 6.0 and earlier, which is said to be used in eSIM products for radio compliance testing.

Specifically, the shortcoming allows for the installation of non-verified, and potentially malicious applets. GSMA TS.48 v7.0, released last month, mitigates the problem by restricting the use of the test profile. All other versions of the TS.48 specification have been deprecated.

“Successful exploitation requires a combination of specific conditions. An attacker must first gain physical access to a target eUICC and use publicly known keys,” Kigen said. “This enables the attacker to install a malicious JavaCard applet.”

Furthermore, the vulnerability could facilitate the extraction of the Kigen eUICC identity certificate, thereby making it possible to download arbitrary profiles from mobile network operators (MNOs) in cleartext, access MNO secrets, and tamper with profiles and put them into an arbitrary eUICC without being flagged by MNO.

Security Explorations said the findings build upon its own prior research from 2019, which found multiple security vulnerabilities in Oracle Java Card that could pave the way for the deployment of a persistent backdoor in the card. One of the flaws also impacted Gemalto SIM, which relies on the Java Card technology.

These security defects can be exploited to “break memory safety of the underlying Java Card VM” and gain full access to the card’s memory, break the applet firewall, and potentially even achieve native code execution.

However, Oracle downplayed the potential impact and indicated that the “security concerns” did not affect their production of Java Card VM. Security Explorations said these “concerns” have now been proven to be “real bugs.”

Cybersecurity

The attacks might sound prohibitive to execute, but, to the contrary, they are well within the reach of capable nation-state groups. They could allow the attackers to compromise an eSIM card and deploy a stealthy backdoor, effectively intercepting all communications.

“The downloaded profile can be potentially modified in such a way, so that the operator loses control over the profile (no ability for remote control / no ability to disable/invalidate it, etc.), the operator can be provided with a completely false view of the profile state or all of its activity can be subject to monitoring,” the company added.

“In our opinion, the ability for a single broken eUICC / single eUICC GSMA cert theft to peek into (download in plaintext) eSIMs of arbitrary MNO constitutes a significant eSIM architecture weak point.”

Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter  and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.

About The Author

[email protected] The Hacker News

See author's posts

Original post here

What do you feel about this?

  • The Hacker News

Post navigation

Previous: GPUHammer: New RowHammer Attack Variant Degrades AI Models on NVIDIA GPUs
Next: CBI Shuts Down £390K U.K. Tech Support Scam, Arrests Key Operatives in Noida Call Center

Author's Other Posts

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims grinex.jpg

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims

April 19, 2026 0 0
Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet botnet-ddos.jpg

Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet

April 19, 2026 0 0
Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched defender.jpg

Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched

April 19, 2026 0 0
Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul google-ads-android.jpg

Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul

April 19, 2026 0 0

Related Stories

grinex.jpg
  • The Hacker News

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
botnet-ddos.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
defender.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
google-ads-android.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
nist-cve.jpg
  • The Hacker News

NIST Limits CVE Enrichment After 263% Surge in Vulnerability Submissions

[email protected] The Hacker News April 17, 2026 0 1
europol.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Operation PowerOFF Seizes 53 DDoS Domains, Exposes 3 Million Criminal Accounts

[email protected] The Hacker News April 17, 2026 0 0

Trending Now

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims grinex.jpg 1

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims

April 19, 2026 0 0
Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet botnet-ddos.jpg 2

Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet

April 19, 2026 0 0
Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched defender.jpg 3

Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched

April 19, 2026 0 0
Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul google-ads-android.jpg 4

Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul

April 19, 2026 0 0

Connect with Us

Social menu is not set. You need to create menu and assign it to Social Menu on Menu Settings.

Trending News

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims grinex.jpg 1
  • The Hacker News

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims

April 19, 2026 0 0
Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet botnet-ddos.jpg 2
  • The Hacker News

Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet

April 19, 2026 0 0
Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched defender.jpg 3
  • The Hacker News

Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched

April 19, 2026 0 0
Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul google-ads-android.jpg 4
  • The Hacker News

Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul

April 19, 2026 0 0
NIST Limits CVE Enrichment After 263% Surge in Vulnerability Submissions nist-cve.jpg 5
  • The Hacker News

NIST Limits CVE Enrichment After 263% Surge in Vulnerability Submissions

April 17, 2026 0 1
Operation PowerOFF Seizes 53 DDoS Domains, Exposes 3 Million Criminal Accounts europol.jpg 6
  • The Hacker News

Operation PowerOFF Seizes 53 DDoS Domains, Exposes 3 Million Criminal Accounts

April 17, 2026 0 0
Apache ActiveMQ CVE-2026-34197 Added to CISA KEV Amid Active Exploitation apachemq.jpg 7
  • The Hacker News

Apache ActiveMQ CVE-2026-34197 Added to CISA KEV Amid Active Exploitation

April 17, 2026 0 0

You may have missed

grinex.jpg
  • The Hacker News

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
botnet-ddos.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
defender.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
google-ads-android.jpg
  • The Hacker News

Google Blocks 8.3B Policy-Violating Ads in 2025, Launches Android 17 Privacy Overhaul

[email protected] The Hacker News April 19, 2026 0 0
Copyright © 2026 All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.