Cell phones need virus protection

Bonn, May 7:

It’s a brave new world for mobile phones as many tasks such as e-mails and web surfing that used to be the exclusive realm of computers have now shifted to phones. Unfortunately, that means viruses and Trojan horse programme have made the transition.

These new viruses with names like ‘CommWarrior,’ usually runs unnoticed in the background, and send itself out as an MMS (a text message that includes data files) to numbers in the telephone book. CommWarrior can only be activated if a user accepts and installs it, which is why it’s generally disguised as an update programme.

Still, the danger is minimal compared to the kind of havoc viruses can wreak in computers. “There’s a lot of unnecessary panic,” said Christoph Hardy, a spokesman for Sophos, a company that designs security software. An owner of an ordinary mobile phones, who uses it mainly for telephoning, has no need to worry.

Mobile phone viruses are aimed primarily at smart phones, mobiles with Symbian operating systems or ones with Windows interfaces. Telephones meeting those standards are rare and their numbers do not warrant an attack.

“Viruses and Trojans targeted at mobile phones so far experiment with proof of concept,” said Matthias Gaertner of the Federal Agency for Information Security Technology (BSI) in Bonn. In other words, the virus makers are trying to determine which forms of attack work.

“There is no current thr-eat,” says Gaertner. But that could change easily as the number of smart phones rises and the use of mobile Internet services becomes more popular with the spread of UMTS devices and sinking fees. Hackers might take an interest in information people send ba-ck and forth via mobile, especially payment services.