Hackers to focus on iPhone next year

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Its immense popularity may turn the iPhone into a painful experience for Apple, if predictions that the mobile device will be a major security target in 2008 are realised.

IT security company Arbor Networks released a statement on Tuesday declaring that the iPhone will be a big target amongst cybercriminals next year.

The company's Security Engineering and Response Team (Asert) said the iPhone will be the "victim of a serious attack" in 2008, noting that the mobile device will probably be hit by "drive-by attacks". Arbor described these attacks as malware embedded in commonly used information, such as images, which are capable of conducting "dangerous actions" when rendered in the iPhone's web browser.

Because of the attention the iPhone has generated over the past year, Asert said hackers will be lured by the idea of being the first to penetrate the new platform and attack Apple users.

Arbor is not the first to issue security warnings about the iPhone. A team of US security researchers in July said they had written two exploits capable of causing "serious problems" with the design and security implementation on the phone.

Research house Gartner also issued a cautionary note in June calling for enterprises to outlaw the Apple device from their office environment, due to a lack of support from major mobile security tools and mobile email vendors, among other issues.

A Gartner analyst, however, later predicted that Apple may introduce an enterprise-class version of the iPhone that will better meet the requirements of a corporate environment.

Other threats in 2008
According to Asert, 2008 will also see an increase in "Chinese on Chinese" online attacks, involving specifically Chinese-language software such as QQ messenger. Arbor noted that such attacks are expected to grow next year as new Chinese users join the online community, more software is written for the Chinese market, and Chinese cybercriminals become increasingly sophisticated and organised.

The IT security vendor also expects much larger Storm botnets and peer-to-peer attacks to be prevalent next year.

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"2007 was the year of the browser exploit, the data breach, spyware and the Storm worm. We expect 2008 to be the year of the iPhone attack, the Chinese hacker, P2P network spammers and the hijacking of the Storm botnet," Jose Nazario, senior security engineer at Arbor Networks, said in the statement.

"Online fraud is soaring and security attacks are now being used in countless and ever more sophisticated ways to both steal and launder money. Financial and other confidential data is being obtained, sold and utilised in the highly developed black market," Nazrio said.

"In 2008, this market will continue to grow and it is important that businesses implement the processes and technology necessary to protect themselves and their customers," Nazrio added.

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