For malicious computer hackers and virus writers, the next frontier in mischief is the mobile phone. A phone virus or a "Trojan Horse" program might instruct your phone to do "extraordinary things". It might call the White House or the police with a bizarre hoax. It might forward your personal address book to a sleazy telemarketing firm.
Or it could simply eat into the phone's operating software, shutting it down and erasing your personal information. Similar nasty hijinks have already dogged cell phone owners in Japan and Europe.
If a malicious piece of code gets control of your phone, it can do everything you can do. It can call toll numbers. It can get your messages and send them elsewhere. It can record your passwords. As cellular phones morph into computer-like "smartphones" able to surf the Web, send e-mail and download software, they're prone to the same tribulations that have waylaid computers over the past decade.
Think of cell phones as just another set of computers on the Internet. If they're connected to the Internet they can be used to transmit threats and attack targets, just as any computer can. And yes, it's technically possible now ! In Japan, deviant e-mail messages sent to cell phones contained an Internet link that, when clicked, caused phones to repeatedly dial the national emergency number. The wireless carrier halted all emergency calls until the bug was removed.
n Europe, handsets short message service, or SMS, has been used to randomly send pieces of binary code that crashes phones, forcing the user to detach the battery and reboot. A new, more sinister version keeps crashing the phone until the SMS message is deleted from the carrier's server. In the United States, relatively primitive cell phone technology keeps users immune from such tricks, for now. Phone hacking is nothing new. In the 1970s, so-called "phone phreakers" made free phone calls -- and even gained control of major phone trunk lines -- by whistling certain tones into the receiver.
It is indeed possible to control the entire network, and do anything an cellphone operator can do. Now, at least three software companies have released personal security software for emerging smartphones, girding for a new wave of phone viruses and Captain Crunch-style tricks. F-Secure is one such firm, selling antivirus and encryption software for smartphone operating systems made by Palm, Microsoft and the Symbian platform common in Europe.
Thus far, there have been no publicized reports of phone hacking or viruses, although viruses have attacked handhelds running the Palm operating system. Microsoft predicts deviant code will soon emerge for handhelds running its Pocket PC software. Both operating systems are expected to be used increasingly in smartphones. A virus is a piece of malevolent code that self-replicates, while a Trojan horse does not but can be just as destructive. The pranks in Europe and Japan created virus-like havoc, but did not propagate like a full-fledged virus. For virus writers who crave notoriety by wreaking maximum havoc, there are still too few smartphones, and no widespread software platform to attack.
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