Smartphones will become the number one target for cyber criminals within five years, according to police and security experts.
Sky News has been shown how hackers are developing viruses to by-pass a phone’s security, including the latest biometric systems.
The malware ‘Trojan horse’ gives cyber-criminals undetected access to a phone’s internal systems, where they can see every key stroke entered by a user. This has serious implications for those who use their phones to access bank accounts and apps that hold sensitive, personal information.
Roughly a quarter of the world’s population own smartphones and the United Kingdom is top of the list with six out of 10 people owning a device.
Keiron Shepherd, senior security engineer at the world leading cyber security company F5 Networks, has been monitoring the targeting of mobile devices by hackers.
He told Sky News: “If you just consider the amount of smartphones and the number of people, it’s a great surface area for attackers to go for.
“Windows was the predominate system, it was the path of least resistance for the malware writers. Devices and operating systems which were considered not an issue to be worried about in the past have now become a target for the malware writers.”
One virus monitored by F5 Networks imbeds in an innocent-looking advert on a website. When clicked, the virus infiltrates their device and monitors every key stroke, even when the user accesses their bank accounts.
Keiron Shepherd said: “The way this virus can insert itself between the applications you’re using before it accesses the internet gives it a chance to extract critical data such as credit card numbers, bank accounts; anything that’s of high value.
“It really is a numbers game. They’ll throw enough malware out there and hope it returns a good investment.”
Police are monitoring an increase in complaints of fraud committed against smartphone users.
City of London Police Commander Chris Greany, the national police lead for cyber protection, said: “People who carry a mobile phone are actually carrying a mobile computer.
“It’s not a phone with a computer attached. It’s a computer with a phone attached and it is as risky using this as it is using the desktop at home.”
Sky News has been shown how hackers are developing viruses to by-pass a phone’s security, including the latest biometric systems.
The malware ‘Trojan horse’ gives cyber-criminals undetected access to a phone’s internal systems, where they can see every key stroke entered by a user. This has serious implications for those who use their phones to access bank accounts and apps that hold sensitive, personal information.
Roughly a quarter of the world’s population own smartphones and the United Kingdom is top of the list with six out of 10 people owning a device.
Keiron Shepherd, senior security engineer at the world leading cyber security company F5 Networks, has been monitoring the targeting of mobile devices by hackers.
He told Sky News: “If you just consider the amount of smartphones and the number of people, it’s a great surface area for attackers to go for.
“Windows was the predominate system, it was the path of least resistance for the malware writers. Devices and operating systems which were considered not an issue to be worried about in the past have now become a target for the malware writers.”
One virus monitored by F5 Networks imbeds in an innocent-looking advert on a website. When clicked, the virus infiltrates their device and monitors every key stroke, even when the user accesses their bank accounts.
Keiron Shepherd said: “The way this virus can insert itself between the applications you’re using before it accesses the internet gives it a chance to extract critical data such as credit card numbers, bank accounts; anything that’s of high value.
“It really is a numbers game. They’ll throw enough malware out there and hope it returns a good investment.”
Police are monitoring an increase in complaints of fraud committed against smartphone users.
City of London Police Commander Chris Greany, the national police lead for cyber protection, said: “People who carry a mobile phone are actually carrying a mobile computer.
“It’s not a phone with a computer attached. It’s a computer with a phone attached and it is as risky using this as it is using the desktop at home.”
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