
India
is the second-most cyber attacks on mobile devices prone country with a
major chunk of these intrusions designed for phishing and stealing
banking details, a report by security software maker Kaspersky said.
Russian
cyber security solutions firm Kaspersky Lab said Russia topped the list
of attacks on mobile phones, accounting for 40.34 per cent of all
attacked unique users.
India, with 7.9 per cent
of attacks, stood at the second spot, followed by Vietnam (3.96 per
cent), Ukraine (3.84 per cent) and the UK (3.42 per cent).
Other
countries in the top 10 included Germany (3.2 per cent), Kazakhstan
(2.88 per cent), the US (2.13 per cent), Malaysia (2.12 per cent) and
Iran (2.01 per cent).
During 2013, nearly
100,000 new malicious programs for mobile devices were detected, more
than double the previous year's figure of 40,059 samples, Kaspersky
said.
"About 98.1 per cent of all mobile malware detected in 2013 targeted Android devices," it added.
The
report also found that about four million malicious applications were
used by cybercriminals to distribute mobile malware for Android-based
devices.
"The majority of mobile malware in
2013 targeted users money. The number of mobile malware modifications
designed for phishing, the theft of bank card information and money from
bank accounts increased by a factor of almost 20," it said.
Kaspersky added that it had blocked about 2,500 attempted infections by banking Trojans.
"Banking
Trojans are by far the most dangerous type of mobile malware for users.
Some of those detected in 2013 were more geared towards stealing money
from bank accounts rather than from a victim's mobile account, which
significantly increases the potential losses," it said.
Vulnerabilities
in the Android OS architecture and its growing popularity were
important factors behind the increase in Android banking Trojans in
2013.
Cybercriminals appear to have become
obsessed with this method of making money. At the beginning of the year
there were just 64 known banking Trojans, but by the end of 2013
Kaspersky Lab's collection contained 1,321 unique samples.
"Today,
the majority of banking Trojan attacks target users in Russia and the
CIS. However, that is unlikely to last for long: given the
cybercriminals' keen interest in user bank accounts, the activity of
mobile banking Trojans is expected to grow in other countries in 2014,"
Kaspersky Lab Virus Analyst Victor Chebyshev said.
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