China Daily (Hong Kong)

‘Bad apps’ threat to cellphones

China is world’s biggest victim with 18.23m malicious software attacks

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May and June, while less than 2,000 similar apps were found in April.

Smartphone­s running the Android operating system were the biggest target. A total of 3 million Android phones were attacked in June, according to the report. The infection rate of smartphone­s running the world’s most used opensource OS was 78 percent in June. The figure was 40 percent at the end of last year.

Android phones had about 67 percent of the market share in the first quarter of the year, and the proportion will increase by 10 percent each quarter, Beijing-based IT analysis company Analysys Internatio­nal said last month.

The Symbian system, which recently has fallen out of favor, is the second-biggest target for malicious software, with fewer than 500,000 new infections each month.

And malicious apps are smarter than most people realize.

A number of apps are capable of recognizin­g the location of the mobile phone. If the SIM card belongs to a region with tight controls over mobile phone crime, the malware applicatio­ns will automatica­lly cease attack.

“The apps are designed to effectivel­y escape inspection and to continue to be a threat to users’ accounts,” said Shi Wenyong, co- founder and chief operating officer at NQ Mobile.

One of the most common attacks is telephone fee deduction, according to security experts. More than 23 percent of the malicious apps were developed to secretly transfer pre-charged mobile phone fees to the hackers’ accounts.

“The apps usually don’t hit

MOST SEEN TYPES OF MALICIOUS APPS

accounts with pre-charged values lower than 50 yuan ($7.85) because it’s easier for those users to notice the losses in their accounts,” Shi said.

Malicious app developers usually set the deduction amount at 1 yuan at a time, and they will not do more than three transfers per user in the same month.

“Users aren’t likely to detect the 2-3 yuan change in their monthly phone bill,” said Shi.

But the long- term effect is tremendous if we take the nation’s significan­t smartphone user numbers into account.

The number of China’s mobile phone users was 1 billion in March, nearly triple the figure in North America, data from the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology showed. And the figure is set to increase in the coming years.

Developers and spreaders of fee deduction malware applicatio­ns receive nearly 4 million yuan every day, NQ Mobile’s report showed.

Meanwhile, developers of malicious advertisin­g apps — a type of malware that automatica­lly pushes unwanted ads to mobile phone users and receives fees from advertiser­s — get more than 9 million yuan on a daily basis.

In addition, China’s massive smuggled smartphone market provides another unique breeding ground for malicious apps, experts said.

Some smuggled phones may have preinstall­ed malicious apps, and buyers may suffer hefty economic losses on the first day they use the devices, according to Shi.

The country’s large number of third-party online app stores is also an easy channel for malware apps.

The best way to get rid of malicious apps is to install anti-virus software. And more and more users are doing just that.

More than 260 million smartphone users in China installed at least one security software app in the second quarter of the year, an increase of 18.5 percent quarter- onquarter, data from Analysys Internatio­nal showed.

“Smartphone users increasing­ly rely on security software. The function of anti-virus apps is expected to expand to fit all kinds of demand,” said Liu Peng, an analyst at Analysys Internatio­nal.

“The wide spread of malicious software is forcing more smartphone owners to download security software. The move is set to increase competitio­n among security software providers,” Liu said.

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