Esato

Used Smartphones and PDAs for Sale on eBay Reveal Massive Volume of Sensitive Data

30 August 2006 by axxxr
Used smartphones and PDAs for sale on eBay are loaded with sensitive personal and corporate information ranging from banking records to text messages and corporate emails that can be easily retrieved by hackers and data thieves, according to a sampling by mobile security software provider Trust Digital.

Trust Digital engineers recovered nearly 27,000 pages of personal, corporate, and device data from nine of 10 mobile devices purchased through eBay for the project, including a smartphone sold by an employee of a major corporation. The salvaged data included personal banking and tax information, corporate sales activity notes, corporate client records, product roadmaps, contact address books, phone and Web logs, calendar records, personal and business correspondence, computer passwords, user medication information, and other private, competitive or potentially damaging material.

The information was retained in the flash memory of the devices because of users’ failure to perform the advanced hard reset required to delete the data. The nine devices with retrievable data included those belonging to a former employee of a publicly traded security software company, an employee of a web services firm, and a corporate counsel of a multi-billion dollar technology company serving the legal market. The tenth device in the test was never used.

The analysis highlighted the vulnerability of individuals and organizations that fail to secure the data on their smartphones and PDAs. Loss or theft of the devices could lead to embarrassment, major breaches of corporate security, or even blackmail.

“Personal and corporate data is being sold on the open market through eBay, and it’s also available to anyone who finds, steals or purchases a used smartphone or PDA from any other source. With nearly 2 billion smartphones currently on the market, the potential for having this information fall into the wrong hands is staggering," said Nick Magliato, CEO of Trust Digital. “The general public needs to immediately be made aware of this fact. Whether you’re talking about pilfering an individual’s private files or stealing corporate secrets, this adds up to a very real data theft epidemic," Magliato noted.

Consumers can protect themselves by enabling the password function on their devices, asking their cellular carriers for information about data security, and “hard wiping" their devices before selling them. Owners of Palm Treo 650s and RIM devices should consult the respective vendors to access the built-in hard wipe function. For other devices, commercial hard wipe products are available.

Businesses can protect themselves by adopting mobile security technology software solutions that secures all forms of data resident on mobile devices at all times. www.trustdigital.com





Comments
On 6 Sep 21:41 Deous wrote
Yea lol i brought a phone from ebay, not a smartphone but a k750i the person i brought it from left all his contacts on there and pictures of him his texts websites etc basicly he just handed over his phone without thinking about who i may be or anything...
On 31 Aug 19:19 smrtphone wrote
i don't think corporate biggies are so stupid that they would sell a phone without erasing all data...multi-national companies these days have special training sessions for all cadres of their staff on how to keep data secure...in case of theft you can't really blame the owner...i think trustdigital is blowing it out of proportion probably to sell some of their own product...wicked marketing.
On 31 Aug 11:30 amed wrote
i have these both mobiles
they are gr8 i like sony ericsson

good luck
On 31 Aug 10:22 etaab wrote
I recently mentioned this on the forum, when you buy a second hand phone often the user forgets to hard reset it, and especially with S60 phones and using apps like FEexplorer you can find all sorts of golden nuggets.

You dont even need to have any hacking knowledge to search the deleted flash memory, you just need to know where to look for items that arent deleted but backed up by the OS.

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