Warning as millions of iPhones targeted by hackers – how to stay safe
SMARTPHONE users have been warned about the escalating
threat of hackers after more than 10 million devices were affected last year.
Cyber crooks have jumped at the chance to exploit our
growing dependence on technology, especially after the pandemic.
So much so, almost a quarter of mobile devices across the
world encountered some form of malicious app in 2021, according to Zimperium
zLabs.
Experts detected more than two million new types of mobile
malware last year.
The number is actually down 50 per cent on 2020 which was
the "year of big changes", as droves of people were forced into
lockdown and many moved to working from home.
But this hasn't stopped hackers from finding new tricks and
scamming victims out of their hard earned cash.
Zero-day, in the wild, exploits - vulnerabilities detected
in actual attacks which no-one was aware of before being hit - shot up by 466
per cent.
"2021 experienced far less change and disruption to
everyday life, and the novel impact of the previous year’s news wore off,
forcing malicious actors to focus on more effective exploits and attacks,"
the 2022 Global Mobile Threat Report says.
"Threat actors have invested heavily in sophisticated
frameworks in 2021, like Flutter, Cordova, and Unity, over traditional code
from years past."
Phishing sites, which rip off familiar names and brands in
an attempt to fool people, also remain a massive threat to mobile users.
The team looked at more than 500,000 dodgy pages and
discovered that the amount specifically aimed at mobiles increased by 50 per
cent.
And it looks like people can no longer rely on HTTPS for a
sign of safety either.
The extension of the traditional HTTP you see in web
addresses is meant to signal secure communication, but researchers found an
increase in phishing sites using it.
This makes it even trickier for users to tell the difference
between a bogus site and a genuine one.
Zimperium’s Richard Melick said: "These findings
illustrate why 2022 must be the year that security teams start to take mobile
security seriously, and employ the same rigor in this arena that they’ve been
applying to traditional endpoints."
Common vulnerabilities and exposures (CVEs) were detected
for both major operating systems, with 357 reported on iOS and 574 on Android.
In other news, prudish Nasa has admitted it may have to
study sex in space if humanity is ever going to make it to other planets.
An ancient mega-landslide deep under the ocean has been
uncovered which could cause a massive tsunami with "just a little shake in
the wrong place".
Samsung has been accused of throttling the performance of
more than 10,000 apps running on its latest smartphone.
And Nasa will let you send your name on a flight around the
Moon – for FREE.
Comments
Post a Comment