AdaptiveMobile talk to USA Today
Dublin, Ireland - August 12th 2008 - AdaptiveMobile recently talked to Leslie Caulie from USA Today about the spread of the Beselo virus and how this shows itself.
Beselo dials up trouble for cellphones
There's a mobile phone virus spreading in a hurry. Called "Beselo," this pesky intruder has a very distinctive calling card: A skull and crossbones. The icon appears after a device has been hit.
Beselo targets devices that use the Symbian operating system; it replicates by attaching to contact lists, stored text messages -- anything with an IP address. The virus won't destroy your cellphone memory, but you may incur data charges as it duplicates itself, says Simeon Coney, vice president of business development at AdaptiveMobile, a Dublin, Ireland-based company that provides mobile security software.
Between late 2007 and March of 2008, there's been a 1,000% increase in Beselo's infection rate, according to AdaptiveMobile, which works directly with cellphone carriers worldwide. And those numbers are continuing to increase, driven in part by rise in multimedia applications and the increasing openness of cellphone networks in general.
Beselo typically masquerades as a text message, image or music file, making it almost impossible to detect. As soon as the file or message is opened, Beselo "installs and executes" on your device, Coney says. The virus also replicates via BlueTooth, he notes.
Coney says the virus typically replaces multimedia icons with one of its own -- a skull and crossbones. "That's one of the more obvious signs" that you've been attacked, Coney says.
One variant of the virus also leaves a text message saying "your phone has been infected by a virus," Coney says. "It's a litle bit of swagger."
To get rid of Beselo, Coney says victims basically have to wipe clean their device memories. That can be done by the user, or sent back to the manufacturer or retailer where the device was purchased.
By Leslie Cauley
Article Date: 13th August 2008
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