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Mobile security shambles due to sloppy handheld habits.


A third of professionals using mobile devices such as PDAs and Smartphones don't don't  

1. Contraction of do not.

2. Nonstandard Contraction of does not.

n.
A statement of what should not be done: a list of the dos and don'ts.
 use passwords or any other security protection and yet three out often of these sloppy slop·py  
adj. slop·pi·er, slop·pi·est
1. Marked by a lack of neatness or order; untidy: a sloppy room.

2.
 handheld happy users store their PIN numbers, passwords and other corporate information on them, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 results taken from The Mobile Usage Survey 2005, conducted by Pointsec Mobile Technologies and SC Magazine.

The results are even more staggering considering the survey was conducted amongst IT professionals who are 'hopefully' more security savvy than the average employee.

According to the survey, corporate personnel now store huge amounts of corporate data on their mobile devices, including customer contacts, email details, passwords and bank account details as well as personal and private information such as friend's details, personal images and even PIN numbers, without giving much consideration to security.

As a result, a lost PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) A handheld computer for managing contacts, appointments and tasks. It typically includes a name and address database, calendar, to-do list and note taker, which are the functions in a personal information manager (see PIM).  or Smartphone A cellular telephone with information access. It provides digital voice service as well as any combination of e-mail, text messaging, pager, Web access, voice recognition, still and/or video camera, MP3, TV or video player and organizer (see PDA).  with no protection makes easy pickings for common thieves List of Thieves. Famous
  • Danielle Bethel
  • Bruce Reynolds
  • Ronnie Biggs
Mythological
  • Prometheus
  • Tantalus
  • Hermes
  • Autolycus
Historical
  • Soapy Smith
  • Adam Worth
  • François Villon
, opportunists, hackers or competitors and could enable them to steal your identity and got at your corporate information. This could have a huge impact on customer confidence, cause an organisation to breach the data protection act or do untold damage to a company's reputation. On a personal level, it could expose you to fraud, embarrass embarrass /em·bar·rass/ (em-bar´as) to impede the function of; to obstruct.

em·bar·rass
v.
To interfere with or impede (a bodily function or part).
 your friends or wreck WRECK, mar. law. A wreck (called in law Latin, wreccum maris, and in law French, wrec de mer,) signifies such goods, as after a shipwreck, are cast upon land by the sea, and left there within some county, so as not to belong to the jurisdiction of the admiralty, but to the common law.  your personal life, the survey revealed.

Since the survey was first introduced 4 years ago, awareness of the risks of storing unencrypted data on a handheld is still surprisingly low and need to be improved to prevent security branches. Seventy eight percent of users don't encrypt See encryption.  the information on their PDA or Smartphone even though sensitive personal and valuable corporate information is being stored on these devices with 81% using them to store business names and addresses, 45% to receive and view emails and 27% store corporate information. Fifty nine percent also use their devices as a business diary and 14% use them to store information on their customers.

According to the survey more people than ever before are losing their mobile devices, last year just 16% had lost one, this year it has increased to 22% and of those that did lose their device 81% had not encrypted en·crypt  
tr.v. en·crypt·ed, en·crypt·ing, en·crypts
1. To put into code or cipher.

2. Computer Science
 their information and admitted that they were worried that the information could fall into the wrong hands and not only cause a security risk as corporate and private data could be lost but also embarrassment as friends and colleagues could be contacted by a total stranger.

Travelling with your mobile device still appears to be the most likely way to lose it, with the majority of them not being stolen but forgotten in the back of a taxi, or left in an airport or on the train. Having one too many drinks in a nightclub or relaxing in a restaurant can also be dangerous as they are the next most common place to lose a device.

When people do lose their mobile device only 40% inform the Police as the rest don't believe them is anything the Police can do or it costs more to report it than to replace it.

The most common functions for the PDA and Smartphone are to store:

1. Personal names and addresses--86%

2. Business names and addresses 8 I%

3. Telephone 71%

4. Business diary 59%.

5 Personal diary 55%

6. Receive and view emails 45%

7. Entertainment--games, music etc 37%

8. Password-PIN numbers 37%

9. Personal images (photographs) 33%

10. Corporate information 27%

11. Bank account details 15%

www.pointsec.com
COPYRIGHT 2005 A.P. Publications Ltd.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Security News
Publication:Database and Network Journal
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:577
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