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You do realize you need to physically have someone's sim card to sim swap them right? Not sure how it works now with esims but being simswapped if you have a physical sim card is virtually impossible
I'm pretty sure you just have to convince a salesperson that you "lost your phone" and get the same number reassigned to a new sim/device. It's the number that's used for SMS based auth, not the sim itself. Social engineering is often a weaker link than hacking or physical theft.
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The threat here is they steal you phone number. There is strong evidence that someone can steal your phone number and is willing to sell that as a service for as little as $1,000 (if its t-mobile, other carriers cost more).
Hackers have also offered t-mobile employees as little as $300 to perform sim swaps, and I'd be willing to bet there were some takers near that price point.
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