UK owners of Bluetooth-enabled smartphones and PDAs are widely ignoring the
security risks posed by the short-range wireless technology and leaving
themselves open to hackers, research claimed today.
Antivirus company
Kaspersky
Lab conducted research in London over three days, detecting more than 2,000
Bluetooth-enabled devices in 'visible to all' mode, the configuration needed for
a hacker to attack the device.
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The research was undertaken on the London Underground network during
rush-hour, at Victoria, King's Cross and Waterloo train stations, and at
Europe's largest security exhibition InfoSecurity 2006.
More than half of the 2,000 devices were detected at InfoSecurity and at one
stage the number of devices within range was so large that Kaspersky Lab's
software had trouble processing all the data.
At one point the firm picked up more than 100 devices in 'visible to all
mode' in a radius of 100 metres.
Alexander Gostev, senior virus analyst at Kaspersky Lab, pointed out that
mobile phones have previously fallen victim to the
Cabir virus
that that uses Bluetooth to replicate.
"The figures are worrying, particularly those collated at InfoSecurity, where
you'd expect people to be far more security conscious," he said.
"If a single mobile phone had been infected, nearly all vulnerable devices
would have been infected in less than an hour.
"Mobile phone viruses are nowhere near as prevalent as PC viruses but, as a
precautionary measure, it's worth setting your mobile's visibility to 'hide
phone' unless you specifically want to exchange information with someone."
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