Hackers plant viruses in Windows smartphone games
BOSTON |
BOSTON (Reuters) - Hackers have planted viruses in video games for smartphones running on Microsoft Corp's Windows operating system, according to a firm that specializes in securing mobile devices.
The games -- 3D Anti-Terrorist and PDA Poker Art -- are available on sites that provide legitimate software for mobile devices, according to John Hering, CEO of San Francisco-based security firm Lookout.
Those games are bundled with malicious software that automatically dials premium-rate telephone services in Somalia, Italy and other countries, sometimes ringing up hundreds of dollars in charges in a single month.
Those services are run by the programmers who built the tainted software, Hering said on Friday.
Victims generally do not realize they have been infected until they get their phone bill and see hundreds of dollars of unexpected charges for those premium-rate services, he said.
Hackers are increasingly targeting smartphone users as sales of the sophisticated mobile devices have soared with the success of Apple Inc's iPhone and Google Inc's Android operating system.
Officials with Microsoft could not immediately be reached for comment.
(Reporting by Jim Finkle; editing by Andre Grenon)
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You have made some serious errors in your report here.
Apparently, the malware comes as programs that the users downloads unaware that the programs themselves contain code to make these spurious calls. Since the malware was purposely downloaded, and does not spread itself to other smartphones, it is NOT a virus.
For a more thorough discussion, see:
http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/10/06/04/expensive_malware_appears_for_microsofts_windows_mobile.html



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