Connecting to unknown wi-fi not safe

Connecting to unknown wi-fi not safe
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Highlights

In the backdrop of massive smartphone penetration in India, a US-based security solutions firm has warned users against attaching to free and unknown wi-fi connections.

Melbourne: In the backdrop of massive smartphone penetration in India, a US-based security solutions firm has warned users against attaching to free and unknown wi-fi connections.

"Free and unknown wi-fi connections can compromise your machine or mobile devices," Peter Sparkes, Senior Director of Symantec's Cyber Security Services (Asia Pacific and Japan) said in Sydney recently while listing top dos and don’ts of averting a cyber attack.

"It is safer to use corporate wi-fi connections but any unknown connections can be a risk," Parkes said.

"Updating the devices to the latest third party technologies and using security software tools can help reduce the risk of being a target of cyber attacks," Sparkes said.

"Once you are online it means that you are visible," he said, adding that one should have different passwords for different logins of banking or social websites. Sparkes said as India advances to highest smartphone penetration it would mean that consumers would have increased connectivity across their devices, gadgets and machines leading to potential for a whole new range of security risks.

India's smartphone market is said to have grown by 84 per cent year-on-year and it continues to be the third highest source of overall malicious activity contributing 5.11 per cent to the global cybercrime.

India is also top source of spam zombies emitting close to 1.45 billion spams into cyber space daily.

The total cost of cybercrime for 2013 stood at $4 billion in India and there were total of 18 million victims in India. "The year 2013 saw increase in targeted cyber attacks that rose by 91 per cent with major vulnerabilities like targeted attack campaigns, coordinated cyber espionage and potential cyber sabotage, increased Hackivism and cybercrime," Sparkes said.

By: Natasha Chaku

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