The only times you ever really think about SIM cards are when you’resetting up a new phone(perhaps at a new,more affordable carrier) or traveling internationally and needing to switch to a local wireless service provider. You may know that SIMs give you access to the carrier’s network with all the stipulations stated in your plan. But if you’re looking for an actual 101 on what these little bits of metal and plastic are and how they do the things they do, you’ve come to the right place.

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What exactly is a SIM card?

The chip and the transistors inside it are made of a mix of silicon and other metals, with the outer surface plated in gold for optimal contact with the SIM reader inside your device. The wireless industry also terms SIMs as Universal Integrated Circuit Cards or UICCs.

The ‘card’ bit of a SIM card is just PVC plastic and is there solely to align the chip contacts with your phone’s SIM reader. For that reason, you could shave off the edges of a Micro-SIM card and have it work inside a device that takes Nano-SIMs.

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A quick history of SIMs

German technology firmGieseck+Devrient claims ownershipof the first patent related to SIMs, having applied for it in 1968 (source:Google Patents). The chip in your debit and credit cards descend from the same patent, by the way, and they fulfill more or less the same purpose in identifying who you are to financial institutions and the merchant. G+D also claims to be the first vendor to bring chips into the mobile communications space,selling them to a Finnish carrier in 1991- these are what we’ve come to know as SIMs.

When it comes to size, the original SIM cards measured more than 3 x 2 inches - nearly the size of a credit card. But as technology advanced and components got smaller, you saw Mini-SIM cards, which stepped things down to about 1 x 0.6 inches. Micro-SIM cards further cut real estate down to approximately 0.6 x 0.5 inches. For about the past decade or so, phones have been usingnano-SIM cards, which are approximately 0.5 x 0.35 inches.

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What exactly does a SIM do, and how?

SIMs, being programmable, have served many purposes over the years. Foremost among feature phone users was the ability to store contact information and the contents of SMS conversations for easy access and continuity. They still theoretically can with their hilariously small storage space of up to 256KB, but modern smartphones have obviated that function by storing that information in their more sizable storage disks and also backing them up over the internet onto a cloud service like Apple’s iCloud, Verizon’s mobile accounts, or Google One.

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An authentication key, in tandem with the identifiers, helps prevent malicious actors from spoofing your SIM because the key stays with the card and isn’t shared openly like the identifiers are. The only time a key is put into use is when a device powers on and needs to sign onto a network. The network issues a challenge with an expected answer that can be obtained by applying the key to it. If the SIM sends back the correct answer, access is authenticated.

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SIM cards can also report location data back to the network based on the towers with which the phone is connected. It’s nowhere near the granularity that GPS data provides, but it’s something. If you’re looking to pencil out a few more details on the items SIMs can carry and execute,Mint Mobile has a surprisingly nifty post.

What are eSIMs and iSIMs?

Remember how we talked about SIM cards shrinking in size? Well, phone makers have been looking to get rid of the SIM tray and even the SIM to make room for other more important parts. In 2022, Apple debuted the iPhone 14 series in the United States as its first without physical SIM support. Instead, you could only access a mobile wireless service via the embedded SIM inside the device or what the industry calls an eSIM.

We have afull article on what eSIMs are, but to give a crash course, you’re still dealing with a physical chip doing all the work it usually does, but you no longer have the ability to change it out, because it’s been soldered to the motherboard of the device.

samsung s21 in hand wood background

That change alone has cascaded many others in how consumers buy and initiate wireless service, as well as how manufacturers and carriers secure crucial SIM information. At the end of the day, instead of switching out a pad of plastic and metal to change your service, you download all the data you need to access the network onto the SIM. We’d be remiss if we didn’t mention that eSIM support spans back several years across iPhones, Androids, and other phones alike.

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Integrated SIMs, or iSIMs, take this evolution to its natural conclusion by having all the SIM data stored and handled from within a secure enclave included within the existing component set of a device, obviating the need for a separate chip. This will likely see your SIM data livinginside the Titan M2 chipon a Google Pixel phone or on Galaxy devices, protected bySamsung Knox.

Purple iPhone 14 Pro Max from the back

The GSM Association, a wireless industry trade group, has issued a specification for the remote provisioning of SIMs. Qualcomm and its iSIM tech partner Thales say their industry-firstiSIM capabilities inside the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2comply with that specification. However, the security of the production and operation of iSIMs will still need to be proven up to a satisfactory standard, so it’ll be a while before we see commercial adoption.