Smartphone Web browsers are unsafe and even cybersecurity experts can\'t detect when they\'ve have landed on potentially dangerous websites, a U.S. study found. In a critical area that informs user decisions -- the incorporation of tiny graphical indicators in a browser\'s URL address field -- all of the leading mobile browsers fail to meet security guidelines recommended by the World Wide Web Consortium for browser safety, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology reported Wednesday. The graphic icons are called either SSL (secure sockets layer) or TLS (transport layer security) indicators and serve to alert users when their connection to the destination website is secure and the website they see is actually the site they intended to visit. Without that graphical confirmation of a secure site, even expert users have no way to determine if the websites they visit are real or impostor sites phishing for personal data, the researchers said. \"We found vulnerabilities in all 10 of the mobile browsers we tested, which together account for more than 90 percent of the mobile browsers in use today in the United States,\" computer science Professor Patrick Traynor said. \"The basic question we asked was, \'Does this browser provide enough information for even an information-security expert to determine security standing?\' With all 10 of the leading browsers on the market today, the answer was no.\" The Web consortium has recommended how SSL indicators should be built into a browser\'s user interface and desktop browsers do a good job of following those recommendations, researchers said, but in mobile browsers the guidelines are followed inconsistently at best and often not at all. \"Research has shown that mobile browser users are three times more likely to access phishing sites than users of desktop browsers,\" Georgia Tech doctoral student Chaitrali Amrutkar said. \"Is that all due to the lack of these SSL indicators? Probably not, but giving these tools a consistent and complete presence in mobile browsers would definitely help.\"
GMT 10:42 2018 Tuesday ,09 January
Why online shopping sales are less on mobile appsGMT 15:58 2017 Thursday ,14 December
UN warns of surging e-waste, little recyclingGMT 20:33 2017 Friday ,03 November
Apple’s iPhone X hits Asia stores as profits soarGMT 20:28 2017 Friday ,03 November
Samsung remains top brand as global smartphone sales keep momentumGMT 21:35 2017 Sunday ,29 October
New iPhone brings face recognition (and fears) to the massesGMT 23:25 2017 Friday ,27 October
Apple says iPhone X pre-orders are “off the charts“GMT 00:35 2017 Friday ,27 October
Nokia loss widens on weak salesGMT 08:41 2017 Tuesday ,24 October
Second Palestinian mobile provider enters GazaMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©