12th Feb 2015.
Valentine's Day ~ Dating Apps Leave Business Vulnerable Warns IBM
Posted on the 12 February 2015 by Sampathkumar Sampath
With mushrooming of
Corporate MNCs, there is globalisation and lot to learn from what happens
around the globe. One advt is to say
‘think globally – act locally’ – while nothing can be generalised, here is one
which clearly shows that global problems are different and that way one can be
happy of not being part of it.
In the past few
years lot has been done to promote 14th Feb – as many ensure pushing
their sales. Globally, there are lot of apps on the market for young folks in
search of love: Tinder, Bumble, and OkCupid, to name a few- all aiming at
potential mates judge one another based on looks. Times reports that Willow, a
new app hitting the App Store is seeking
a different approach. Instead of swiping left or right based on the first
selfie you see, you’re prompted to answer a set of three questions—written by
users—that are designed to spark up a conversation. What’s more, users decide
when and if they wish to share photos with other users; at first, the answers
to these questions are all future dates see. The app’s founder Michael Bruch
says Willow puts the “social” back in social media. Bruch, now 24, was fresh out
of New York University when he launched the app last year. He says he was
looking to fill a void he noticed when using dating apps that focused on swipes
rather than what you like. “You can match with a bunch of people that you think
are good looking but you don’t really know much about them until you start
talking to them,” Bruch tells. So the
archaic saying of it is not beauty alone that makes a match !
In
the Tamil movie Kadhalar Dhinam – comedian
Goundamani making a comeback of sorts
in a DiCaprio's Titanic haircut would try to pursue romance over the
Internet. In the initial days of
Internet, which perhaps continues – there were so many fake IDs ~ and looking
for love online was sought after. While
none can prevent anyone from falling in love – there is a different dimension
to this, from the technical perspective !
There
are reports that dating apps could be
leaving businesses vulnerable to cyber attacks.
Millions of users logging onto dating apps from their company smartphone
could be exposing themselves and their employers to hacking, spying and theft,
according to a study by International Business Machines Corp (IBM). IBM
security researchers said almost two thirds (26 of 41) dating apps they
analysed on Google Inc's Android mobile platform had medium or high severity
vulnerabilities.
Some of the dating
apps have become popular on account of the freedom they allow users, helping
them to search for potential love interests based on a range of factors, such
as location and hobbies, and to send instant messages. They are cheaper than
traditional dating sites or often free. IBM found employees used vulnerable
dating apps in nearly 50 per cent of the companies sampled for its research.
Using the same phone for work and play, a phenomenon known as "bring your
own device", or BYOD, means users and their employers are both open to
potential cyber-attacks. "The trouble with BYOD is that, if not managed
properly, the organizations might be leaking sensitive corporate data via
employee-owned devices," said the IBM report.
The IBM study
reveals that many of these dating applications have access to additional
features on mobile devices such as the camera, microphone, storage, GPS
location and mobile wallet billing information, which in combination with the
vulnerabilities may make them exploitable to hackers. Users may let their guard
down when they anticipate receiving interest from a potential date. That’s just
the sort of moment that hackers thrive on, the researchers say. Some of the
vulnerable apps could be reprogrammed by hackers to send an alert that asks
users to click for an update or to retrieve a message that, in reality, is just
a ploy to download malware onto their device.
A hacker can change content and images on a
dating profile, impersonate the user and communicate with other app users, or
leak personal information externally to affect the reputation of a user’s
identity. This poses a risk to other users, as well, since a hijacked account
can be used by an attacker to trick other users into sharing personal and
potentially compromising information. The basic rule is to check the permissions any
app asks for, use unique passwords for each account and use only trusted connections for accessing
the web. Companies should allow employees to only download applications from
authorized app stores such as Google Play, iTunes, and the corporate app store,
IBM advises.
Concluding with a
news of a Texas teenager who reportedly got
fired from her new job less than 24 hours before she started after she used a
couple of choice expletives to describe it on Twitter. “Ew I start this f***
a** job tomorrow,” tweeted the teen with username @Cellla_. CBS reports that
the job she was referring to was at a branch of Jet’s Pizza in Mansfield,
Texas. Unfortunately for the luckless teen, her tweet was spotted by store
owner Robert Waple who terminated the employment on social media. Waple reportedly
last tweeted in 2009, and logged on only to publicly terminate Cella’s
employment.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
12th Feb 2015.
12th Feb 2015.