Category: Mobile Security

Are Mobile Payments Safe

Not only more and more people doing their online browsing and shopping on their mobile devices, in some third world countries their affordability makes them the only choice for people who want to access the World Wide Web.

Additionally, they can be much more convenient for making transactions, due to NFC systems, and the fact that people often need to engage in ecommerce while on the go. So there is no doubt that there is a demand for a reliable mobile payment system, and that that demand will only be increasing as time goes by, as the number of people enraging in this type of transactions grows, but are mobile devices safe enough to be entrusted with your money?Mobile Payments

Well, due to a number of possible methods of payment that you may be interested in, and different devices and platforms they are using, this is not really a question with a definitive answer, but if you know what you are doing and try your best to keep your transactions as secure as possible, you shouldn’t have to worry about the safety of your transactions too much. For instance, certain types of payment practically don’t require you to give out any information apart from your cell number, so you don’t have the risk sharing your information online. Likewise, in direct, bar code payment, you are not required to trust someone with your credit card, while NFC systems are quite secure, and mostly use encoding when performing transactions.

This is to say that, in some aspects at least, mobile payments, that don’t come down to just simply entering your credit card data like you would on a PC, can be much safer than some of the more conventional electronic payment options. However, this is not to say that they are without any risk, which is why you have to take proper precautions. For instance, if you are not using a direct payment method, but instead sending data over a wireless connection, you have to make sure that you are not doing so over an unsecure, public network, like the ones you find malls, coffee shops and the like.

Additionally it would be a good idea to protect your mobile device with antivirus software. The vulnerability of the device will mostly depend on the platform it is using. For instance, iOS, which is a tightly monitored system is considered to be quite a bit more secure than the open Android, but on the other hand, that means that more developers tried to polish out the chinks in Android’s armor with security apps, you only have to take the time to find and install the ones that you feel provide you with the best protection. Most of these apps also give you a way to password protect your device, which is to say that even if you lose it, people probably won’t manage to retrieve the sensitive information that you have on there.

As mobile payments are becoming a more common method of performing financial transactions, more people are focusing on making them safer, which is to say that they are offering more security as each day goes by, but you should probably still only use this method of payment for smaller transactions, and use some of the safer methods for heavier purchases.

Article by Samuel Evans blogger and writer for “Mobile Shop” Samuel currently exploring everything related to mobile phones and gadgets.

Mobile surveillance security objections of tech industry led by giants

Google and Facebook are leading the group from the tech industry that is seeking changes to government spying.

A group of the largest and most powerful tech companies in the world have come together in an effort to improve mobile surveillance security for their users, who now know that they are being watched by certain government agencies, particularly in the United States.

These industry leaders are seeking to encourage wide scale changes to the American government’s Big Brother activities.

The companies have called themselves the Reform Government Surveillance group. They are seeking to make massive mobile surveillance security changes to the way that the American government has been watching people in the country and around the world. Much of this action is the result of the revelations made by whistleblower Edward Snowden, who revealed – among other things – that the NSA has been watching millions upon millions of people every day, around the globe, gathering information such as location data from their mobile devices.

The group has said that it should be possible for individuals and businesses to have greater mobile surveillance security.

Mobile Surveillance SecurityThe Reform Government Surveillance group is made up of Google, Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, Yahoo!, Twitter, AOL, and LinkedIn. This alliance was created in order to move ahead their communal belief that “it is time for the world’s governments to address the practices and laws regulating government surveillance of individuals and access to their information.”

The organization has placed its backing behind widespread new reforms that federal politicians have proposed. The group’s website has suggested five different core elements that require changes. They are:

• Accountability and oversight
• A limit to the authority of the government for user data collection
• Government demand transparency
• Avoidance of government related conflicts
• Respecting a more free flow of information

An open letter from the group to the American government has urged them to “take the lead and make reforms that ensure that government surveillance efforts are clearly restricted by law, proportionate to the risks, transparent and subject to independent oversight.” The goal is to boost mobile surveillance security and privacy for users of the standard and mobile web.