Mobile
virus
A mobile virus is an electronic virus that targets mobile phones
or wireless-enabled PDAs.
As wireless phone and PDA networks become more numerous and more
complex, it has become more difficult to secure them against electronic
attacks in the form of viruses or other malicious software (also
known as malware).
History
The first instance of a mobile virus occurred in June 2004 when
it was discovered that a company called Ojam had engineered an anti-piracy
Trojan virus in older versions of their mobile phone game Mosquito.
This virus sent SMS text messages to the company without the user's
knowledge. This virus was removed from more recent versions of the
game; however it still exists on older, unlicensed versions. These
older versions may still be distributed on file-sharing networks
and free software download web sites.
In July 2004, computer scientists released a proof-of-concept mobile
virus named Cabir. This virus replicates itself on Bluetooth wireless
networks, but is completely harmless.
In March 2005 it was reported that a computer worm called Commwarrior-A
has been infecting Symbian series 60 mobile phones. This worm replicates
itself through the phone's Multimedia Messaging System (MMS). It
sends copies of itself to other phone owners listed in the phone
user's address book. Although the worm is not considered harmful,
experts agree that it heralds a new age of electronic attacks on
mobile phones.
Common mobile viruses
Cabir: Infects mobile phones running on Symbian OS. When a phone
is infected, the message 'Caribe' is displayed on the phone's display
and is displayed every time the phone is turned on. The worm then
attempts to spread to other phones in the area using wireless Bluetooth
signals.
Duts: A parasitic file infector virus and is the first known virus
for the PocketPC platform. It attempts to infect all EXE files in
the current directory (infects files that are bigger than 4096 bytes)
Skulls: A trojan horse piece of code. Once downloaded, the virus,
called Skulls, replaces all phone desktop icons with images of a
skull. It also renders all phone applications, including SMSes and
MMSes useless
Comwar: First worm to use MMS messages in order to spread to other
devices. Can spread through Bluetooth too. It infects devices running
under OS Symbian Series 60. The executable worm file once launched
hunts for accessible Bluetooth devices and sends the infected files
under a random name to various devices.
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