While computer viruses are almost exclusively the work of organised
criminals, mobile viruses are largely the work of amateurs, according to an
industry expert.
Kimmo Alkio, chief executive at
F-Secure,
told
vnunet.com
that mobile viruses encountered by his company rarely bore the hallmarks of
organised criminal gangs.
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This stands in stark contrast to the well documented use of worms and Trojans
in PCs to build botnets and steal information by identity theft.
"We believe that mobile viruses are still created mainly by hobbyists," said
Alkio. "Criminal attacks are a tiny proportion of mobile virus attacks."
Alkio believes that there are two principal reasons for this. Firstly, the
number of smartphones capable of holding information that could be used for
financial gain is still relatively small compared to the overall user base of
mobile phones. This makes them a relatively unattractive target.
Secondly, there is no monoculture of operating systems in the mobile sphere.
European phones are largely Symbian-based while US smartphones predominantly use
Windows Mobile.
This is in contrast to the PC market where around 85 per cent of PCs use
Windows, with the rest split between Apple and open source code. This makes it
easier to write a virus for a PC that is likely to be productive.
"Organised criminals have realised that mobile viruses are not the best way
to make money," said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at
Sophos.
"Why bother to write a mobile virus when PC ones make more money? Meanwhile
amateurs are writing viruses for bragging rights; the infections are relatively
rare and they might get a story to show their friends."
In the longer term, as phones get more powerful and smartphones more
pervasive, this may change. But Cluley noted that this has not occurred as fast
as many had predicted.
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