Technology | GSM German Hacker Cracks Cell Phone Code Expert warns 80% of cell phones lack proper protection By Rob Quinn Posted Dec 30, 2009 4:36 AM CST Copied Confidential cell phone communications are at risk because the GSM algorithm has been compromised, hacker Karsten Nohl has warned. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan) A German hacker says he and his team have managed to crack the code that has protected most of the world's cell phone conversations for over 20 years. Karsten Nohl told a hackers' conference in Berlin that cracking the encryption code for GSM communications—which secures 80% of cellular communications—raises serious security problems for phone networks, the Wall Street Journal reports. Cracking the GSM code previously required equipment costing hundreds of thousands of dollars, largely limiting spying to governments, Nohl told the conference. Armed with the code—which has been published online—criminals would have the capability to listen in on cell phone calls with a laptop and a couple of network cards. Nohl says he's not worried about lawsuits from phone companies because his research was undertaken purely to highlight security flaws and persuade companies to update their technology. Read These Next RFK Jr. suggests antidepressants to blame after shooting. Isolated tribe members show up in an unexpected place. Details trickle out on 2 more victims of the Minneapolis shooting. Trump just used a spending maneuver last seen nearly 50 years ago. Report an error