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By Dawn Kawamoto
Posted on ZDNet News: Sep 22, 2005 5:02:00 PM

A Trojan virus that attempts to spread from smart phones to users' PCs was discovered Wednesday, marking one of the first cases of virus "cross-sharing" between the two devices, according to security firm F-Secure.

Cardtrap.A, a Trojan that attacks Symbian mobile phone operating systems, attempts to infect users' PCs if they insert the phone's memory card into their computers. Though this latest threat is considered low-level because it requires user interaction and fails to launch on a number of Windows systems, including XP, it may be a precursor to more sophisticated viruses designed for transfer between mobile devices and PCs, said Mikko Hypponen, F-Secure chief research officer.

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"We expect to see more of this on the mobile front," Hypponen said. "We may begin to see Windows viruses spreading to PDAs that are synched up to computers, or go from PCs to mobile phones with the memory card."

Cardtrap.A copies two worms, Win32/Padobot.Z and Win32/Rays, to a phone's memory card. Once that card is inserted into the PC, Padobot.Z will attempt to start automatically on Windows-based machines via the autorun.inf file. The Ray worm, meanwhile, will create a bogus system folder on the user's desktop. Clicking on the folder unleashes a worm into the user's computer system.

The Ray worm is more likely than Padobot.Z to take root in a system, because the Padobot worm may only launch on older versions of Windows, or be restricted to just a few memory card readers.

Windows does not generally support auto-run from a memory card, which means that a virus won't automatically be transferred from a memory card to a user's PC and then launched. But in some instances, memory cards appear to the PC as CD-ROM drives, which would trick the auto-run feature into running the file, Hypponen said.

The volume of mobile-device malicious software has been rising rapidly, with 83 different viruses emerging within just a 14-month period, he added. Among the threats were the Fontal.A Trojan horse in April, the CommWarrior Trojan and the infamous Cabir virus.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 24 Talkback(s)
Bad engineering?
When os's were created, it was assumed every computer was independent and as the OS,s progressed, backward compatablity was needed to keep the base of existing programs. No one was assumed to be dishonest.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: RUlistening Posted on: 09/23/05 You are currently: Logged In | Log out
About time! An_Axe_to_Grind   | 09/22/05
My brother had one take down his MAC John Zern   | 09/22/05
Really? Immanuel Tranz-Mischen   | 09/22/05
Re: My brother had one take down his MAC Otto_Delete   | 09/22/05
Now for one that jumps to iPods Boot_Agnostic   | 09/22/05
Well, the product is big enough to get... John Zern   | 09/22/05
Size doesn't matter. Immanuel Tranz-Mischen   | 09/22/05
But does bad phone design mean Boot_Agnostic   | 09/23/05
That is an unverifiable claim Real World   | 09/23/05
It would seem that even Linux Experts ... ShadeTree   | 09/23/05
of course they do D-Ram   | 09/23/05
Bad engineering? RUlistening   | 09/23/05
A few well advertised James Dean_z   | 09/22/05
I wish they would specify "Windows PCs" Chad_z   | 09/22/05
correct, as now it does include viruses for John Zern   | 09/22/05
Please enlighten us. Immanuel Tranz-Mischen   | 09/22/05
There have been and will continue to be ... ShadeTree   | 09/23/05
Well, for the Mac 3D0G   | 09/23/05
What OS is in the affected phones wackoae   | 09/22/05
The expected OS NonZealot   | 09/22/05
Looks like... Qbt   | 09/22/05
Symbian != MS embedded... dsentman@...   | 09/23/05
Perhaps an appropriate analogy... dsentman@...   | 09/23/05
re: wrongview ShadeTree   | 09/23/05

What do you think?

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