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In New York, under the shadow of preparations for the UN General Assembly, a digital time bomb was ticking. It had no fuse or explosive material, but its potential to sow chaos was just as great. This was a gigantic, illegal telecommunications infrastructure, neutralized at the last minute by Secret Service agents. What they discovered was more than just a setup for common fraudsters. It's a glimpse into a new era of hybrid threats, where digital paralysis can instantly turn into a physical cataclysm. Let's examine the anatomy of this digital weapon to understand just how close one of the world's most important metropolises came to disaster.

As part of their investigation, agents discovered over 100,000 SIM cards connected to more than 300 servers, deployed across at least five locations within a 35-mile radius of the UN headquarters. The scale of the operation was staggering—an infrastructure capable of handling the communication of a small city, but created for one purpose: anonymity and mass action. Special Agent in Charge Matt McCool of the Secret Service emphasized that the network had the potential to completely disable cell towers, a scenario worthy of a digital armageddon.

How can a handful of servers and plastic cards threaten a metropolis? The key is a technology known as a SIM Box or SIM server.
The ability to send 30 million anonymous text messages per minute is enough power to deliver a fake message to every resident of the U.S. East Coast in a matter of seconds.
Although the Secret Service thwarted the operation before disaster struck, it's worth analyzing what this infrastructure could have been used for, especially during the UN General Assembly:
The investigation is ongoing, but the motives and potential perpetrators fall into several categories:
The discovery of this operation is a cold shower. It shows that threats to national security are no longer confined to nuclear weapons labs, but can also be found in unassuming apartments filled with electronics. Someone wanted to have a digital "red button" for New York City in their hands. Fortunately, this time, they failed.
Sources:

Chief Technology Officer at SecurHub.pl
PhD candidate in neuroscience. Psychologist and IT expert specializing in cybersecurity.
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