Likelihood: MODERATE
Impact: HIGH
Treatment: MITIGATE
Confidence: Moderate
Likelihood is moderate: exploitation is unconfirmed at the organizational level and requires physical proximity of rogue IMSI-catcher hardware to targeted employees, but 13 million messages across the GTA demonstrate the campaign is active at scale and carrier-side controls provide zero mitigation, meaning any employee working in or commuting through affected urban areas is a viable target with no detection warning. Impact is high because a successful credential or MFA token harvest against a mobile-using employee opens a brief but actionable window into email, SaaS platforms, or financial systems — consequences that are operational, financial, and potentially regulatory if sensitive data is accessed.
Treatment rationale: The attack vector is active, technically unblockable at the carrier layer, and directly targets the credential-access pathway into corporate systems, making risk acceptance indefensible and avoidance (banning all employee mobile use in affected geographies) operationally unrealistic; targeted technical controls — disabling 2G on managed devices, phishing-resistant MFA, and employee awareness — meaningfully reduce the attack surface.
Third-Party / Supply-Chain Risk
Organizations relying on SMS-based MFA delivered through any carrier network (NIST SP 800-161 shared-service dependency) inherit the vulnerability unconditionally: the rogue base station attack bypasses the carrier's own fraud controls, meaning the third-party telecom's protective capability is effectively zero for this threat class. SaaS platforms and identity providers that accept SMS OTP as an authentication factor amplify downstream exposure — a harvested token grants access to vendor-hosted environments, not just internal systems.
Loss Exposure (illustrative)
Magnitude: moderate-to-high — illustrative $250K–$2M per realized credential-access incident, driven by the downstream systems accessible via harvested credentials rather than the smishing event itself
Frequency: Illustrative: for an organization with employees regularly operating in affected GTA urban corridors and SMS-based MFA in use, plausible exposure is 1–3 meaningful phishing encounters per quarter during active campaign periods; successful credential harvest probability per encounter is lower but non-trivial given zero carrier-side filtering
Annualized: Illustrative ALE: if one in ten encounters produces a usable credential harvest and one realized access event occurs every 12–18 months, annualized loss exposure illustratively ranges $150K–$400K when inclusive of detection, containment, notification, and remediation costs — insufficient basis to narrow further without organization-specific system-access and data-sensitivity inputs
Basis: Loss magnitude anchored to the consequence of downstream system access (email, SaaS, financial platforms) enabled by a harvested MFA token, not the smishing delivery itself; costs reflect incident response, potential notification, and access revocation workstreams. Frequency reflects active campaign scale (13M messages, confirmed GTA geography) offset by the physical-proximity constraint on rogue base station deployment and the conditional probability of a targeted employee being within range during a campaign window. No third-party cost reports cited.
Illustrative estimate — not actuarially derived.
Insurance / Contractual / Legal — Potential Obligations
Potential triggers, not legal determinations. Verify with counsel/broker before acting.
• If employee credentials harvested via smishing are used to access systems containing PII or regulated data, this may invoke provincial and federal breach-notification obligations under PIPEDA and applicable provincial privacy statutes — verify with counsel.
• A credential-access event resulting from SMS-layer phishing may constitute a covered cyber incident triggering notice obligations under the organization's cyber-insurance policy — verify with broker before and after any incident.
• If the organization provides SMS OTP as an authentication mechanism to customers or partners and customer accounts are compromised, contractual breach-notification or liability clauses in service agreements may be triggered — verify with counsel.