Do not, on pain of Android death, open this text message.
A dangerous piece of correspondence, first spotted by Norwegian
security firm Heimdal, is said to effectively hand the reigns of your
mobile device over to malicious hackers, who can then wipe the phone
clean, or worse yet, make calls or texts on your behalf. The message
contains a link to an application, and the text itself reads, “You have
received a multimedia message from +[country code] [sender number]
Follow the link http:www.mmsforyou [.] Net /mms.apk to view the
message.”
Immediately thereafter, according to Metro.uk,
“The application installs the application Tor and then sends an
automated text message to a number in Iran saying, ‘Thank you.’” Truly
terrifying.
Heimdal believes that this malicious text has been sent to over 100,000 in Denmark alone,
and it is yet unclear as to whether residents of other countries have
received the message. That said, there appears to be one small caveat to
the text’s effectiveness — if the phone’s language is set to Russian,
the dangerous app will not install.
The
implications of this sort of uninvited administrator access to your
smartphone are serious, Heimdal points out. Given that your phone is
used to verify two-factor authentication mechanisms (often considered
one of the more secure forms of protection), ceding control of your
phone to a hacker can lead to identity theft, and thereafter, property
theft.
“Attackers
can open a backdoor into Android smartphones, to monitor and control
them as they please, [and] read SMS messages,” the security firm says.
This means hackers “can also read authentication codes sent as part of
two-factor authentication mechanisms, used also by online banking apps
and e-commerce websites, and use their full access to Android phones to
basically manipulate the device to do whatever they want.”
So
what can you do to protect yourself? Don’t set your phone to Russian,
first of all (unless you read the language, of course). Instead, Heimdal
suggests, “NEVER click on links in SMS or MMS messages on your phone.
Android phones are notoriously vulnerable and current security products
dedicated to this OS are not nearly as effective as they are on
computers.”
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