New Capabilities Drive Cell Phone Security Demands

Feb 14, 2007 

The growing functionality of mobile phones -- which in the future could be used 
to unlock doors and make credit-card purchases -- is driving demand for
new and stronger security products, companies exhibiting at the 3GSM World 
Congress in Barcelona said. 

"It's a matter of devices becoming more and more like mobile computers," said 
Ofir Zukovsky, sales director, software solutions for Discretix Ltd., a 
developer
of security products including authentication key management, cryptography and 
content protection employed by mobile phone chip makers. 

Users may become particularly conscious of security on their phones as they 
begin to use them for more personal applications. Even currently available 
applications,
such as camera phones, open the door to potentially damaging security problems. 
Photos of family members stored on a phone in combination with other personal
information could enable certain kinds of identity-theft crimes, said Zukovsky. 

Future applications that might store a user's fingerprint or passport 
identification information could also lead to potential problems if a user's 
phone
is stolen or broken into, said George Minassian, vice president of strategic 
planning and systems engineering for Spansion Inc.'s wireless division. 

Spansion's technology resides in the Flash memory of a phone. One of its 
offerings aims to protect users as they download more and more applications to
their phones. The technology would allow users to choose to download a new 
application or piece of content into a secure area. If the application contains
malicious code, it can't damage the rest of the phone and users can easily 
delete it, Minassian said. 

A similar offering would allow users to take photos with their camera phone and 
opt to store the photo in a secure area. User's might want to use the feature
for photos of family members, for example. They'll need to enter a password in 
order to access the photo in the future. 

Spansion is offering the technologies but they so far haven't been deployed by 
handset makers. 

Both Spansion and Discretix promoted security at the hardware level, rather 
than suggesting that end users rely primarily on antivirus software. While 
antivirus
software is easy to install, the fact that it is software means it can be 
corrupted by hackers and it can also slow performance of devices, Minassian 
said.
Hardware or firmware-based solutions are harder to corrupt, he said. 

However, one downside to the technologies offered by Discretix and Spansion is 
that they must be adopted by chip makers and then phone manufacturers, a
process that could take two years, Minassian said. "We're protecting for when 
the mobile wallet comes out. We have to predict the applications," he said.


Discretix is promoting at 3GSM its DRM (digital rights management) offering, 
which will be used in Motorola Inc.'s newest Z8 phone and which Opera Software
ASA announced it will integrate into its mobile browser. The product supports 
several DRM systems, including those from Microsoft Corp. and NTT DoCoMo
Inc. 

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,129007-pg,1/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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