Mobile Security
Mobile security or mobile phone
security has become increasingly important in mobile computing. It is of particular
concern as it relates to the security of personal and business
information now stored on smartphones.
More and more users and businesses employ
smartphones as communication tools, but also as a means of planning and
organizing their work and private life. Within companies, these technologies
are causing profound changes in the organization of information systems and therefore
they have become the source of new risks. Indeed, smartphones collect and
compile an increasing amount of sensitive information to which access must be
controlled to protect the privacy of the user and the intellectual property of the
company. According to ABI Research,
the Mobile Security Services market will total around $1.88 billion by the end
of 2013.
All smartphones, as computers, are
preferred targets of attacks. These attacks exploit weaknesses related to
smartphones that can come from means of communication like Short Message Service (SMS), Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS), Wi-Fi networks, Bluetooth and GSM, the de facto
global standard for mobile communications. There are also attacks that exploit
software vulnerabilities from both the web browser and operating system.
Finally, there are forms of malicious software that
rely on the weak knowledge of average users.
Different security counter-measures are
being developed and applied to smartphones, from security in different layers
of software to the dissemination of information to end users. There are good
practices to be observed at all levels, from design to use, through the
development of operating systems,
software layers, and downloadable apps.
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