口頭答弁 · 2026-05-07 · 議会 15
SIMカード購入・再登録パターン及びGSMゲートウェイ悪用に対する規制強化とリアルタイム異常検知
ビクター・ライ議員が、海外の詐欺電話を現地発信に見せかける通路になるとして、大量SIMカード購入、SIM再登録パターン、GSMゲートウェイ悪用に対し、より厳格な管理とリアルタイム異常検知を導入するかを情報通信省に尋ねた。MDDI上級政務次官タン・キアットハウは、すでに上流管理を整えていると答えた。2025年10月1日から詐欺の出し子は新規回線契約を禁じられ、2026年2月28日から1人あたり全通信会社合算で後払いSIM10枚(既存のプリペイド3枚上限に加え)に制限され、2025年に警察は詐欺関連回線10万5,000本超を遮断した。IMDA、政府技術庁(GovTech)、警察はデータ分析で不審な購入・登録パターンを検知している。ライ議員がリアルタイム監視の有無と閾値の設定主体を追及すると、タン次官は多機関と民間を含む社会全体の取り組みだとし、「道高一尺、魔高一丈」を引いて閾値を動的に調整すると説明し、作戦上の安全のため詳細は明かさないが、AIを含む技術とデータ分析を活用していると明言した。さらに電話を最初の接触手段とする事件が減少し、SMSを最初の接触手段とする事件は約65%(2024年1,285件→2025年450件)減ったとし、IMDAとGovTechが共同開発したSIMCardHowManyという、自分名義の後払いSIM枚数を確認できるツールを紹介した。
重要なポイント
- • IMDA/GovTech/警察はデータ分析で不審なSIM購入・再登録パターンを検知
- • 大臣は詐欺検知にAIを含む技術を活用と認めるが、作戦上の安全のため詳細は非公開
- • 後払いSIMは1人10枚上限(2026年2月28日から)、2025年に10万5,000本超の詐欺回線を遮断
- • SMS最初接触の詐欺が約65%減少、SIMCardHowManyで名義のSIMを確認可能
多機関と民間の協働で上流に管理を置き、AIとデータ分析で動的に検知し、閾値は機関横断で共同設定して手口の変化に応じ継続的に調整
AIとデータ分析が通信層の詐欺阻止の中核ツールとなる一方、検知閾値と詳細は作戦上の安全を理由に非公開
“しかし確かに、私たちは技術、データ分析、そしてAIのような技術の活用を含めて取り組んでいます。”
参加者 (2)
英語原文
SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 2026-06-02
14 Mr Victor Lye asked the Minister for Digital Development and Information whether the Government will consider tighter controls and real-time anomaly detection for (i) bulk SIM card purchases (ii) SIM re-registration patterns and (iii) GSM gateway misuse, given their role in enabling overseas scam calls to appear local.
The Senior Minister of State for Digital Development and Information (Mr Tan Kiat How) (for the Minister for Digital Development and Information) : The Government takes a proactive stance against scam calls and has put in place upstream controls to deter the abuse of SIM cards and GSM gateways.
The Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) has worked with the Singapore Police Force (SPF) to tighten SIM card registration rules. Since 1 October 2025, scam mules are barred from subscribing to new mobile lines. From 28 February 2026, each person is limited to 10 postpaid SIM cards across all telecommunication companies (telcos), on top of the existing cap of three prepaid SIM cards per person across all telcos.
In 2025, SPF disrupted more than 105,000 scam-related mobile lines across all telcos. The IMDA, the Government Technology Agency of Singapore (GovTech) and SPF are using data analytics to detect suspicious SIM card purchase and registration patterns to prevent the misuse of SIM cards for criminal activities.
The import, sale and use of GSM gateways are regulated by IMDA. Gateway devices with five or more SIM card slots are prohibited without IMDA's prior approval for import since 1 February 2025.
The Government will continue to review and strengthen our multi-layered anti-scam measures as scam tactics evolve. Those who enable scammers by providing SIM cards or GSM gateway devices will be dealt with severely under the law. Mules who supply SIM cards to scammers may be liable for imprisonment of up to three years and caning of up to 12 strokes.
Mr Speaker : Mr Lye.
Mr Victor Lye (Ang Mo Kio) : Thank you, Speaker. I thank the Senior Minister of State for the reply. I also want to refer to the earlier Parliamentary Question, where the Minister of State made a very important point – that prevention is better than cure – in the case of scams.
With regard to what IMDA and the Ministry is doing, may I ask two supplementary questions?
First, is there real-time monitoring – and as was referred to earlier, done as a cross-agency effort and a whole-of-Government effort – to fight scams? Is there a real-time monitoring of unusual data usage, use of GSM gateways and so on?
My second question is, who mandates the monitoring thresholds and the data criteria? Is it set at the macro level or is it left to the individual telcos to determine?
Mr Tan Kiat How : Sir, I thank the Member for the two supplementary questions. Building on what Minister of State Goh Pei Ming had said earlier on the replies to the earlier two Parliamentary Questions, this is a multi-agency effort across different Government agencies – the Ministry of Digital Development and Information, the Ministry of Home Affairs, IMDA, GovTech, SPF and the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority, on the import of GSM gateways – so, it is a multi-agency effort. On top of that, I should also mention the Monetary Authority of Singapore, which is an important player.
And on top of the multi-agency effort, it is also an effort that involves the private sector. We work closely with telcos, financial institutions and banks. We also work together with other important players, including e-commerce platforms. It is a scourge against society and it requires a whole-of-society effort.
So, when the Member talks about the thresholds on SIM cards and prohibition, it is something that we look at together across the different agencies – building on the data that has been collected, certainly by SPF and other agencies as well, and finding the right threshold and refining the threshold depending on the scam tactics involved. So, it is something that is not static but is dynamic, alive and something we look at on a regular basis.
In Chinese, there is a saying: "道高一尺,魔高一丈". Scam tactics are evolving, the bad actors are evolving; and we, the good guys, the defenders are also evolving our tactics.
In that spirit, I want to assure the Member that we are using different tools, including data analytics, to look at scam tactics and the patterns of how they are evolving. But because of operational security considerations, we do not want the bad actors to know what we are doing. Hence, I will not share any of the operation details. But certainly, we are using technology, data analytics, including leveraging technologies like AI.
I also want to make two quick points.
One, a point about the number of cases coming down. The number of cases with phone calls as the first contact method has actually decreased, based on the recent publicly available Annual Scams and Cybercrime Briefs. The number of cases with short message service (SMS) as the first contact method has also decreased about 65% – from 1,285 cases in 2024, to 450 cases in 2025. So, that is progress. But we are not resting on our laurels and we must continue to monitor and take action.
And related to that, I know that some prevention is better than the pursuit of recovery of assets. I know that a number of Singaporeans are also wondering: would my number and name be used to register for SIM cards by mules or by bad actors? IMDA, together with GovTech, has jointly developed a new tool, SIMCardHowMany, you can Google it and look at it online, which allows mobile phone users to check the number of postpaid SIM cards currently registered under their names. This allows the members of the public to check their registered SIM cards included within the postpaid limit of 10 SIM cards. Persons who discover discrepancies or suspects that postpaid SIM cards have been fraudulently registered under their names should inform their telcos immediately.
So, prevention is better than pursuit of losses after that.