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Hot Selling Devices Spell Great Insecurity Opportunities
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| Guest post by: Andy Marken |
Article Overview: OMG your iPhone tracks your movements. Well yes your Android does to and the wireless companies and Homeland Security and Facebook and Google and Mom, Dad and ..... How do you think you get those neat coupons when you walk by the store? How do you think your phone service knows how to deliver a call or your email server to deliver your spam. You probably can't remember the last time you were alone...really alone. Sure you thought so but you silly boy/girl ! Getting off the grid is getting even more difficult. Sometimes it's a bad thing but overall well just don't get paranoid...you're really boring to follow.
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Free Download - Bigger, Better Pixels Make Video a Whole New Game By Andy Marken |
Hot Selling Devices Spell Great Insecurity Opportunities
"No matter how incompetent the assassins, no matter how much they miss their
target, there's always one person who always gets hit." - Frank Farmer (Kevin
Kostner), "The Bodyguard," Warner Bros (1992)
The growing list of mobile
device options is exhilarating!
You can be in touch with anyone,
anywhere--all the time. And anyone, anywhere can be in touch with you.
It
doesn't matter if you're at home, in the office, in class, at a party, thinking
about a party, talking about a party...
Doing, thinking anything you tap,
post it, BAM!! you're sharing...with the virtual world.
Wait a minute, you
don't want to share it with "them?"
Don't want them to tap into your
device...your home...your business?
Tough!
Privacy is invaded all of the
time.
As the woman in green said, "I've been watching you all night from
across the room."
They've developed neat stuff like Zeus-Murofet, Conficker
and Koobface SymbOS/Zitmo.A and Android/Geinimi, OddJob,
Trojan.Tatanarg.
Trojans are the most abundant type of malware on the
Internet, accounting for 60 percent of the top 10 threats.
Tatanarg, for
example, is a masterpiece.
It can hijack SSL/TLS connections (check the
meaning at Wikipedia) between say the bank and proxy servers, use the bank data,
insert its own and as far as you're concerned, everything is cool,
secure.
After all, you see the bank's secure sign, so what could
possibly go wrong?
Financial Opportunities - The volume of new mobile
devices presents a tremendous opportunity for hucksters and cybercriminals to
tap in, find just the right information and capture very good profits with very
little risk. Whether it's actual wireless phone calls or unique apps, the
mobile device is giving nasty people a huge garden of devices to harvest from.
Users just don't think about security right now.
Gee...think we'll stick
with paper 'n people.
They aren't just targeting you.
According to
Symantec (the security folks), it's global.
World of Hurt
They track
this stuff and have found that data breaches show no sign of leveling off and
are increasingly costly.
And the boundary between hactivism and cybercrime
is a little fuzzy.
Global Pirates - It seems like almost everywhere you
turn, there is someone or some group out to make a statement and they want to do
it right on your device. It was simple for Anonymous to plant viruses and
Trojans in servers and devices. Security firms are always one step behind
because you don't know what evil someone will do until it has been done.
Then
too, there are those really foggy areas that governments like to refer to as "in
the public interest" and "national/international
security."
Hundreds of
Opportunities - With so many people using their personal mobile device(s) when
they're at work, they've created a whole new level of security
challenges/headaches for IT personnel. The smartphone, tablet, USB drive,
notebook are all subject to physical and data loss. Who is held responsible?
Why IT...of course. Source - IDC
One of the best businesses to be in it
seems is security hardware, software, service.
Frank studied the numbers and
commented, "I want to keep it straight in my head what job I'm
doing."
According to IDC, the security industry racked up more than $65B in
sales around the globe and even the best of them are constantly challenged to
keep up with the bad guys.
It used to be Windows PCs were the big target, but
that's so yesterday. Now it's your new
toys.
My Device, Your
Data - We may be "convinced" that the business world is adopting tablet
solutions in wholesale numbers. But tablets aren't replacing notebook systems;
and smartphones aren't replacing all of the other devices. Sorry, but people
are increasingly carrying five or six devices - smartphone, notebook, tablet,
ereader, MP3 player-all needing protection. Source - IDC
World of
Apps
Then too, there are those growing libraries of apps.
Who really
guarantees that they're really good, lead you to places that are really
legitimate, don't have any hidden backdoors?
In fact, McAfee (another group
of folks who focus on security), recently reported a 46 percent increase in
mobile device malware - 20 million new pieces of malware or nearly 55,000 new
threats every day from 2009 to 2010.
Folks go where the action is.
Okay,
so Google in its rush to keep up with Apple, let a few apps in the library with
Trojans; but geez, they did proactively go out to all of the infected devices
and remove the pesky things.
That's really neat.
Of course, the fact that
they - or the appropriate government agency - can reach out any time they want,
find your device, reach inside and do stuff shouldn't bother you in the
least...does it?
Right!
Frank looked around and noted, "I want to keep it
straight in my head what job I'm doing."
It boils down to a matter of
private, public cooperation and trust.
We have to get comfortable with the
inevitable failure, the inevitable breach.
As Frank said, "The people who
hire me, they don't have to be convinced to save their own lives."
We have to
come to an understanding that the value of sharing outweighs the risk of the
failure/breach.
When it doesn't, get rid of the devices, the connections.
Go for a Drive
Oh, that includes your car.
Have you seen the guy call
his wife shortly after she boarded a plane and asks her to unlock the car and
then she starts it?
OnStar system, Safety Connect, Enform, Sync, Assist,
Mbrace are all great in an emergency or a pinch! They wirelessly connect to the
car and provide a fantastic service.
Of course, bad guys can use the same
access, insert malicious software, access the car's electronic control unit and
give a whole new approach to smash 'n grab.
More Sophisticated
Carjacking - Because today's autos are so widely connected and have major
computing power, you may wonder if Rockstar might have to completely redesign
GTA (Grand Theft Auto) to mirror state-of-the-art car theft. It may be real but
not as much fun with advanced technology boosting, rather than smash 'n grab.
Source - Rockstar
There's not a huge concern though because the automotive
and HW/SW industries are taking the job of improving the security of your car
very seriously.
Security at Work
O.K., so the bad guys are doing their
darndest; but come on, we're not riding a bike to work.
Speaking of work, it
turns out your boss and the IT departments are also concerned.
All those neat
devices people are insisting that they use in their work also make it very easy
for hackers and disgruntled employees to work their magic.
Frank looked
around, saw the situation and said, "This house is wide open."
More
Targets - As the popularity and versatility of the Internet grew, so did the
number of devices that can be attached to it. Nearly everyone has a minimum of
two devices they regularly use on the wired and wireless network.
Unfortunately, few ensure every device is secure. Source - IDC
Risk
consultants Kroll reported for the first time that companies were experiencing
more electronic data theft than physical theft.
It's pretty easy - whether
it's for a legitimate business purpose, by accident or a malicious reason -- to
walk out with the company's sensitive data on a USB stick.
Attack From
Within - While IT organizations build as robust walls as possible around the
company's network and data, most of the loss occurs either maliciously or
accidentally by people who are bent on "acquiring" the data for their own profit
or it is moved out of the organization and lost by accident or careless
actions. The most valuable and most dangerous asset walks out the front door
every evening.
Businesses lost almost $1.7 million per billion dollars in
sales worldwide, compared to the $1.4 million per billion dollars reported in
2009.
Whether it's your information or your company's, you know there's
hundreds of ways and thousands of folks out there who can reach in and suck out
your important stuff.
Personal Security
The key isn't to be paranoid
because then you wouldn't even get out of bed. Simply use reasonable security
including:
- Use strong passwords - at least 10 character minimums, maximum
of 90-day changes, forced complexity
- Use secure file, folder
permission
- Use privilege account log-in
- Delete unnecessary
software
- Remove insecure programs like TFTP
- Use a securely configured
browser on your devices
- Keep your OSes and apps patched, current
- Use
up-to-date antimalware
- Use a firewall with appropriate rules set
- Use
strong wireless protocols - WPA2, EAP-TLS, etc
- Use connected
cloud-based email, services, sites
- Be cautious, skeptical
Of course,
we've all heard folks walking down the street, sitting in a restaurant, getting
on a plane, whatever hollering on their cellphone to order something spilling
everything including credit card info...and more.
Brain Drain - You don't
have to be Homer Simpson to have someone extract all of your critical personal
and corporate information from your mind. Today's insecure mobile devices and
poorly protected cloud storage make it surprisingly easy for hackers and
criminals to capture just the data they want/need to do further damage to your
company and/or you.
Source - Matt Groening
You can get a good
bodyguard, but getting one to protect the mind/mouth?
As Frank said, "I -
I can't protect you like this."
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About the Author: Andy Marken RSS for Andy's articles - Visit Andy's website G. A. "Andy" Marken President Marken Communications, Inc. Santa Clara, CA Andy has worked in front of and behind the TV camera and radio mike. Unlike most PR people he listens to and understands the consumer’s perspective on the actual use of products. He has written more than 100 articles in the business and trade press. During this time he has also addressed industry issues and technologies not as corporate wishlists but how they can be used by normal people. He has been a marketing and communications consultant for more than 30 years involved in the wild early days of the Internet/Web, heyday of the videogame industry and the maturing professional and consumer video industries. His experience includes years with Internet pioneer CERFnet, TCG and AT&T. Andy has worked in the software, Web 2.0, video and storage industry with Panasonic, Philips, Dazzle, Atari, NTI, ADS Tech, Pinnacle Systems, CyberLink, InterVideo, Ulead and Verbatim. Click here to visit Andy's website CONDUCT YOUR OWN MARKET RESEARCH The New Matrix Shrinking StorageKeeping Data Safe Close At Hand Do We Ignore Half the Market Live at 5 Handling The TV Interview |
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