Smart phones, smarter viruses

We are yet to claim victory over computer malware, but here comes another 
threat -- mobile viruses.

Research organisation IDC estimates that the market for mobile security 
software in India will grow by 70 per cent a year and by 2008, reach around $1 
billion.

Symantec, McAfee and F-Secure are the front-running players in supplying 
security software for handsets. And all of them feel that tapping the domestic
smartphone base of 10-12 million users is worth it.

Kimmo Alkio, president & CEO, F-Secure says, "Today, you are more likely to get 
hit by Windows malware than by any mobile phone threat."

Yet, antivirus makers like F-Secure are raising the red flag as they predict 
the number of mobile attacks to escalate over the next year or two. "I think
we are really at the tipping-off point."

According to Juniper Research 'some sort' of mobile security product will be 
installed in almost eight per cent (around 250 million) of mobile phones by
2011.

N Ajay Kumar, country manager, Aventail India agrees: "Smartphones or converged 
devices like Blackberry have become the norm in Indian enterprises."

He feels enterprises have made a healthy contribution in adopting security 
solutions. Aventail's Connect Mobile for Windows mobile smartphones leverages
the unified access control policies of the Secure Sockets Layer Virtual Private 
Network (SSL VPN, which can be used with a standard web browser), to limit
access to sensitive corporate data based on individual ID.

"In the event of mobile theft, corporates won't have trouble blocking or even 
deleting confidential data from a device that is secured with Aventail's 
solution."

Securing content (anti-virus, anti-spam, anti-spyware and content filtering) is 
expected to be the biggest sector in mobile security, notes Juniper Research,
accounting for 40 per cent of the total security market.

"The security threat does not just cover mobile viruses and malware but 
identity theft, too. We expect revenues from mobile data and mobile file 
encryption
products to outstrip those in the PC market by 2011," the report continues.

Vishal Dhupar, managing director, Symantec India, is similarly optimistic, "In 
general, we foresee that our products will be on all handsets. India is adding
thousands of smartphones every month, which lends us business opportunity to 
expand our mobile solutions for customers and enterprises."

However, the average individual mobile security product, moderately priced at 
Rs 1,800-Rs 2,000, has not exactly been flying off shelves.

Kartik Shahani, regional director (Sales), McAfee, says: "We are yet to see 
customers demanding security solutions for their smartphones, even as enterprise
customers have been growing steadily."

Symantec, too, chooses to remain upbeat about individual customers, while it 
renews its focus on enterprises.

Last year saw the emergence of SMiShing (phishing via SMS) and spyware 
(MobiSpy) in the mobile domain. Yet mobile service providers continue to focus 
on
their networks rather than phones, as they try to thwart mobile virus threats.

According to Shahani, there exists a large gap between the kind of protection 
operators consider important and that which they actually deploy. "We are
in talks with operators to deploy applications and device-level protection."
The mobile world should not repeat the mistakes of the PC world, opine experts. 
Malware protection services ought to be built into networks first, and device
protection should be the last resort. It would be ideal if a network was able 
to recognise and eliminate threats, but that concept is perhaps too futuristic.

(Sweety Bhalla)
Mobile # 9868300466, 9818132488
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