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November 24, 2009
A new worm is targeting jailbroken iPhones and adding them to a mobile botnet, according to a security memo from security vendor Intego.
Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move? % of PC Advisor readers agree with you What tasks can your smartphone do that would have traditionally been done on a laptop? Follow the conversation at @SmartphoneFocus web browsing, search facilities, voip, email, word processing everything RT @Graham_D_C Mainly email but getting better at spreadsheets etc, RT @IDGdanQuestion of the day!
Intego says that the worm starts off scanning local networks for jailbroken iPhones that have installed Secure Shell (SSH) and that haven't changed their default password. So far, the worm is scanning IP addresses of ISPs in The Netherlands, Portugal, Hungary and Australia. If the worm finds an unprotected iPhone, it will copy itself onto the device and add it to its botnet.
Additionally, the worm changes the device's password and thus prevents users from changing the password themselves. It then connects all infected devices to a central server in Lithuania that directs them to participate in distributed denial-of-service attacks, send spam or deliver malware to other machines.
The botnet worm, dubbed 'iBotnet.A' by Intego, is the third major piece of iPhone-centric malware that has popped up over the last month. The first iPhone worm was a fairly innocuous piece of malware that replaced the iPhone's regular homescreen with Rick Astley wallpaper, a nod to the popular 'Rick Roll' internet meme. The second piece of malware harvested personal data from iPhones, including user email, contacts, SMS messages, calendars and multimedia files.
See also:
Free whitepaper: Phishing for victims - Truth, myth and cybercrime
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Question of the day!
Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move?