Information Security News mailing list archives

Era of picking your own PDA draws to a close


From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 13:37:52 -0500 (CDT)

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/21732.html

By John Leyden
Posted: 18/09/2001 at 16:12 GMT

Firms may soon mandate the use of particular handheld devices and
mobile phones in order to establish some kind of control over security
risks.

That's the view Symantec's director of wireless strategy, Jason
Conyard, who is encouraging firms to develop security policies to
combat mobile security threats such as hacking into wireless networks
and next-generation malicious code.

Conyard isn't suggesting a particular platform (Symbian, Palm OS,
Pocket PC) for firms to use. He said standardising on the same device
and configuration to limit both support costs, and manage security
exposure, is more important that what the device a firm might pick.

Symantec is under no illusions that implementing a mobile security
policy will be easy.

Users are used to choosing their own mobile device based on what they
consider "cool and sexy" and a change in culture to use of uniform
corporate issue kit is unlikely to go down well. Low adoption of
current security standards (often "too complicated" according to
Conyard) is another issue. Tools for managing the application and
configuration of mobile devices are "very basic", Symantec admits,
which hardly helps.

Enterprises (or service providers) run the risk of running foul of the
Data Protection Act if they don't access due care over customer data,
which might be exposed by flaky wireless security, so Symantec is
right that the issue can't be simply ignored.

Wireless LANs can be secured by measures such as only allowing access
over a VPN and restricting use to authorised devices but anecdotal
evidence suggests 802.11b networks are often put up which are wide
open to drive-by hacking.

This is only the start of the problems that Symantec outlined in a
threat timeline for us today. Threats we take as serious include DoS
attacks on mobile networks in 2002, location based spam (late 2002)
and hacking attacks on GPRS networks in 2003. Very nasty.

We're far less convinced about the emergence of mobile viruses on
next-generation phones, in part because the anti-vendors like Symantec
have such a vested interest in hyping this one up.

It remains unproven whether Symbian or even Stinger-based devices will
be particularly susceptible to mobile viruses even as they become more
common-place and therefore a more attractive target to s'kiddies. The
basic PDA viruses we've seen so far have not convinced us that we'll
see wireless worms along the lines of the Anna Kournikova virus by
2003, as Symantec suggests.

If mobile phones ever come with Word macros or potentially infectious
mobile attachments things will change but, for now, the threat remains
unproven.



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