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Lookout Predicts More Mobile Malware In 2012

Lookout Mobile Security has been diligent in their duty to protect mobile devices from malware lurking in every corner of the tech world.  They reported yesterday that a new type of malware, RuFraud, is invading mobile devices disguised as free version of popular paid apps and games like Angry Birds.  Though early threats were neutralized, it doesn’t stop malware developers from re-posting, even after the first wave was removed by Google from the Android Market.

The “addressable market” in the mobile sector is huge, which makes malware makers giddy with excitement as the electric grid serves 80% of the global population and the wireless grid already reaches 85% of individuals worldwide.  With the addition of built-in payment mechanisms in mobile devices, it’s like were asking to be infected with malware – an open invitation to be violated.

At the beginning of 2011, the chance of encountering malware on Android devices is at 1% and the threat increased to 4% at the end of November.  Lookout identified more than 1,000 malware threats since July 2011.  And it’s not only because of apps.  Web-based threats, like phising, already crossed from the PC realm to the mobile realm, and there’s a 36% chance that an Android user will click on an unsafe link globally, while there’s a 40% chance that that would happen to Android users in the US.  Lookout predicts that in 2012, malware threats on mobile devices will only continue to rise.

Lookout identified the two key drivers for malware writers along with the type of malware that comes with them:

1. Profit from infection: New Methods of Malware Monetization

2. Cost of infection: Innovation in Malware Distribution

Though security companies are hard at work battling malware attacks, malware writers won’t stop anytime soon.  They seem to enjoy the cat-and-mouse chase.  So we, as users, should also do our part to protect our devices and ourselves–we can’t always rely on other people to protect us.

Lookout identified the most common mistakes that people do to put themselves in harms way:

Click here if you want to read more of Lookout’s tips in keeping your mobile device safe from malware attacks.

You can’t always trust anything on the web, but Lookout has a trustworthy track record so far – it even acquired a fourth round of funding, amounting to $40 million, demonstrating investor interest for their mobile-specific take on security.  They even partnered with Sprint to provide customers with protection against malicious sites, phishing scams and drive-by downloads with the premium version including privacy, backup and restore, missing device, remote lock and wipe, security and management.

Lookout has come a long way, helping nab a robber with their tracking feature, protecting iPhone users, then moving on to protect Android tablets, and flourishing globally with their Telstra partnership with it being the largest telecommunications company in Australia.

In the same vein:

Article source: http://siliconangle.com/blog/2011/12/13/lookout-predicts-more-mobile-malware-in-2012/

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