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Nokia slams phone makers that put dangerous adware on devices

Image from Shutterstock.com (c) Maksim Kabakou

Personal computers are still the biggest targets of malware but mobile device infections are increasing, says the latest threat intelligence report from a communications equipment service provider Nokia.

However one of the biggest worries, the company added, are smart phone companies that unwittingly — or knowingly — put malware in their devices. The report cites media stories last November that 120,000 Android Blu Inc. phones distributed in the United States had accidentally been loaded with a “Firmware Over The Air” (FOTA) update service from the Chinese firm Shanghai ADUPS Technology Co. Ltd. which sent private user information, including copies of received text messages, to a server in China.

The manufacturer and Blu Inc, corrected the problem, says the Nokia report, but that the same issue exists on other ADUPS managed devices.

“The incident also highlights a sinister trend that has hit the smart phone market,” says Nokia. “There are several brands of inexpensive phones whose cost is being subsidized by adware that comes pre-installed on the phone. Accepting pop-up advertisements for a cheap phone is one thing, but often the adware that provides the advertisements will feed private personal information from the phone to the adnetwork for tracking purposes, without the permission of the user.”

“Our smart phones contain a record of our lives: our text messages; e-mail; photos; and music. It is bad enough when cybercriminals go after it, but it’s inexcusable when the companies that manufacture the phones are complicit.”

The report covers general trends and statistics for malware infections in devices connected through Nokia customer mobile and fixed networks in the second half of 2016.

Among the findings:

The report is available here. Registration is required.

 

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