Android scare

The funniest thing about this is that as far as mobile phones go, the last OS that you want is android if you want to minimize your risk of getting a virus on your phone.

oh my lolz, isn't android just another iteration of linux ??//1`!
 
The funniest thing about this is that as far as mobile phones go, the last OS that you want is android if you want to minimize your risk of getting a virus on your phone.

oh my lolz, isn't android just another iteration of linux ??//1`!

Again, there is not a single virus for Android, Malware yes, virus no. The thing about this malware is that they do exactly what they programed to do and only have access to what the user has access to, and worse they ask for your permission to do it when they install.

Do not blame the OS for people's incompetence or ignorance.
 
abandonallhope ''The funniest thing about this is that as far as mobile phones go, the last OS that you want is android if you want to minimize your risk of getting a virus on your phone.

oh my lolz, isn't android just another iteration of linux ??''


Mmmm. This is where I started out and considered even iPhone 4S, because I need to address my needs. As Lumia, at the time, did not support OVI Suite, I had to venture out. I have been in ICT since 1982 but retired a decade ago.
Even though I read a lot, there is little opportunity to gain practical experience, though.


Android was ported from x86 Linux to run on mobile CPU's. Unlike its safe mother, it seems to be a naughty teen in the making.

Am still contemplating Lumia 800, or 820, but am learning about Android. Seemingly a place to get burnt as some poke with spears....??
 
Yes, Apple could perhaps be the real American Idol! Hahaha.

My wife and I, througj our lifestyle based upon the beliefs of our maker, will be 100% safe from HIV because we don't fornicate. We use what we have according to its intended purpose and perfect design. As a result, we have joy.


If one communicates and computes along those lines, ones gadgets also should be safe and bring forth a joyful experience.


You and I have that wisdom but a few billion others gamble with their lives. They also use their gadgets to fornicate and can expect to become infected.

WTF did I just read.:wtf:
 
Mmmm. This is where I started out and considered even iPhone 4S, because I need to address my needs. As Lumia, at the time, did not support OVI Suite, I had to venture out. I have been in ICT since 1982 but retired a decade ago.
Even though I read a lot, there is little opportunity to gain practical experience, though.


Android was ported from x86 Linux to run on mobile CPU's. Unlike its safe mother, it seems to be a naughty teen in the making.

Am still contemplating Lumia 800, or 820, but am learning about Android. Seemingly a place to get burnt as some poke with spears....??

Again, the user installs the programs that ask your permission to access your data, in that sense Android is safer than Linux. You can write the same malware for Linux and whats worse it will not ask for your permission to access your /home/username folder, the program will just go ahead and do it anyway.

Seriously people do you not understand computers? I find it more and more scary that you call yourself a "Linux geek". Also what bloody browser you using that you can not reply with quote as I even get that option with Lynx(Linux text based browser)
 
Virus....malware.....all hostile and still almost 2,000 for Android, 80-90 for WM and nobody knows how many for iOS. Symbian also has a few.
 
iOS doesn't have malware.

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Last week the news sites were full of headlines proclaiming that the “first iOS malware” had hit the iOS App Store. Just one problem with those headlines: they weren’t 100% accurate.

The “Find and Call” app – the Android version of which we detect as ANDROIDOS_INFOLKFIDCAL.A, and the iOS version as IOS_INFOLKCONTACTS.A – has only one key feature. It sends the user’s address book to a remote server without the user’s explicit say-so. Simply put, that’s a clear violation of privacy and apps shouldn’t be doing it. Period. In this particular case, the people in the address book were spammed, but that was done by the remote server, not the “malware” itself.

But there’s one problem. Legitimate apps have done exactly the same thing before. The social networking app Path was famously caught doing this earlier this year. Path came under tremendous fire for breaching user’s privacy so blatantly.

This was enough of a concern for Apple that the iOS 6 beta explicitly requires user consent every time before an app can access/send a user’s contacts, calendars, reminders, or photos.

The fact is that enough legitimate apps want access to user’s behavior that the practice of sending a user’s calendar information to a server isn’t instantly thought of as “bad” behavior anymore, because so many people let their apps do it. Unfortunately, the act of sending a user’s contact list has been “legitimized” by these apps, even if it remains, strictly speaking, odious behavior. In fact, “Find and Call” did explicitly ask for access to the user’s contact list.

Users should ignore the exaggerated hype about this “first iOS malware” to think about what it really did – it gave an app (and, implicitly, the people behind that app) access to their contacts. Think about how many apps ask for similar permissions – usually in the guise of sharing with or finding your friends/contacts. This incident should serve as a wake-up call to users as to exactly who – and how often – they’re giving their information to.

Apple deserves kudos for giving users the tools to help manage their personal information. Other mobile OS vendors should follow suit to provide all users with methods to protect their privacy.

http://blog.trendmicro.com/trendlabs-security-intelligence/malware-for-ios-not-really/

Oh and this is why I Say Ad Detector should be default in Android, so you can see what apps really have access to what.
 
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Sorry it has 1

You mean 1 in the app store, there are loads of them in the cracked apps/underground, but seeing that jailbreak is required its a none news event.

Oh and read my post above, privacy is worth so little tease days that people actually install the "malware" voluntary.
 
Bottom line is, if you think any OS is safe and secure, you're fooling yourself.
 
I don't think I called myself a Linux geek but did state that I have some experience of various distros as a user. Yes, I love Linux simply because it runs very stable. Mint 12 KDE on a Core2Duo 2.1GHZ with just 3GB old DDR is really doing well. I even have an old Pentium 4 Mobile with just 1GB faring well on Ubuntu 9.04. The machine's own XP became corrupt and it won't accept its own software key, so I installed Ubuntu.

I am working here on an old E63 though......
 
I don't think I called myself a Linux geek but did state that I have some experience of various distros as a user. Yes, I love Linux simply because it runs very stable. Mint 12 KDE on a Core2Duo 2.1GHZ with just 3GB old DDR is really doing well. I even have an old Pentium 4 Mobile with just 1GB faring well on Ubuntu 9.04. The machine's own XP became corrupt and it won't accept its own software key, so I installed Ubuntu.

You sure about that?

I saw on Google news a few days ago that there is another Android scare that had set the cat among the pigeons. It can wipe your device clean.

There are almost 2,000 viruses/malware aimed at Android and just around 80 - 90 for Windows Mobile. As the latter runs on locked devices, it is obvious that Windows devices are safer to use.

And I am a Linux geek saying this!

Guess I need new glasses?
 
doobyscoo ''iOS doesn't have malware.''

Anything, even ''legitimate'' apps that access/distribute my data without my specific consent may not be seen as malware by others. To me, it is a hostile malware app.

Apple is not free from that, either. No software is.
 
It is hilarious. Nokia, by initially offering no PC Suite for Lumia, forced me to look at others and iPhone looked good until iSync was discontinued. (I need usb sync = no cloud.) So, Apple leaves me no option but to consider Android. Then Lumia suddenly supports PC Suite (or OVI Suite) and here I am back at Nokia.

No phone or software will ever be king. Many approved apps are seen as malware at least by me, because of the way that it can acces and use my data. My Nokias all suffered from a condition called Symbian, with its own quirks and inadequacies.

Yet it used to get the job done. My frustration is also with eccentric browsers including Nokia's, Opera Mini & Mobile, UC Browser and others that all have some latent inadequacy.
 
It is hilarious. Nokia, by initially offering no PC Suite for Lumia, forced me to look at others and iPhone looked good until iSync was discontinued. (I need usb sync = no cloud.) So, Apple leaves me no option but to consider Android. Then Lumia suddenly supports PC Suite (or OVI Suite) and here I am back at Nokia.

No phone or software will ever be king. Many approved apps are seen as malware at least by me, because of the way that it can acces and use my data. My Nokias all suffered from a condition called Symbian, with its own quirks and inadequacies.

Yet it used to get the job done. My frustration is also with eccentric browsers including Nokia's, Opera Mini & Mobile, UC Browser and others that all have some latent inadequacy.

Get a Blackberry.

It has a PC suite, BIS and is made for users like you.
 
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