Hackers are always looking for ways into other people’s data and information to use for their own benefit. For the past few years the art of hacking has gone beyond attacking a single platform at a single time – malware attacks are in some cases focused on bringing down not just a Windows PC but a Mac at the same time. And more recently it seems that you can lose your Windows to malware fitted to apps that run on cell phones and smartphones, as was observed in the case of the App Store that found malware which was mistakenly tied to an app because the developers system was infected. You don’t just have to worry about spy software for cell phones.
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Showing posts with label Smartphone Hacking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smartphone Hacking. Show all posts
iPhone's Siri Hacked to Start Car
The new iPhone 4S has some incredible new features. Amongst these would be its ability to provide a weather report or directions to a particular destination. Siri is able to read your text messages to you. Siri can even be asked to remember dates and appointments. Now, another function for Siri has been discovered. Siri can be used to start up your car.
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Turn Your Smartphone Into Mobile Hacking Device Through Android App
Mobile Phone Hacking is on its peak so that Smartphone's owners have to look after their mobile phones seriously to avoid dangerous hacking attempts especially "Android Smartphone Users". Because it has been rumored spreading on internet since last weeks about an Android App called Anti or Android Network Toolkit, which perhaps going to launch in Android Market Next Week. This new Android Application Program has been introduced by which Israeli security firm Zimperium which is revealed at the Defcon hacker conference in Las Vegas Friday and plans to make available to all Android users in coming days, is designed for penetration testing in theory, searching out and demonstrating vulnerabilities in computer systems so that they can be patched. Anti aims to bring all the hacking tools available to penetration testers on PCs to smartphones, with an automated interface intended to make sniffing local networks and owning remote servers as simple as pushing a few buttons. However, the way people tend to use smartphones can also put them at risk. Herring noted that mobile users tend to be in distracting environments, so they generally provide only short bursts of divided attention to their phones.
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