Security alert for BlackBerry users
Related Links
Relevant offers
Gadgets
BlackBerry maker Research in Motion has issued a security patch for the popular device, whose users include President Barack Obama, warning that it is vulnerable to attacks by hackers.
Research in Motion issued the security warning last week in a bulletin on its website, but officials could not be reached to comment on details of the patch.
If the patch is not applied, security experts said, there is a risk that hackers could exploit the vulnerability, though they have not done so yet.
Such problems are not unique to Research in Motion. Technology companies constantly battle to stay ahead of increasingly sophisticated hackers. Every time a vulnerability is identified, there is potential for hackers to exploit it.
"It is a serious problem. You need to read the advisory and implement a fix before the hackers try to take control," said Graham Cluley, a senior researcher with anti-virus software marker Sophos.
When companies publicize security flaws, criminals rush to exploit them because it can take weeks or months for users learn of such problems and protect against them.
Businesses often hold off on installing patches so they can test them to make sure that the new software is compatible with other programs in their network. Sometimes a patch can cause other types of software to malfunction.
The newly disclosed vulnerability could allow hackers to take control of servers running BlackBerry systems by sending emails with tainted attachments in Adobe Systems's PDF format, according to computer security researchers.
If the device's user opens one of those attachments, it would seek to install malicious software on the server at the data centre that runs a company's BlackBerry network. Hackers could then covertly use that server to send spam or steal corporate data.
"All kinds of nastiness could occur," Cluley said.
A spokesman for Symantec, the world's biggest maker of security software, said the cost of such an attack would be greater the value of the BlackBerry since it would hit the far bigger corporate network itself.
Research in Motion issued patches to resolve similar problems in January.
The Canadian company pays close attention to such issues because it prides itself in security, counting intelligence agencies and top executives at the world's largest corporations among its customers.
Research in Motion suggests that businesses block their users from opening attachments until they install the patch.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Microsoft's man who monitors privacy
'Janitor satellite' made to clean up space
Australia to get R18 rating for games
iPad factory conditions 'better than the norm'
App turns iPhone into adult toy
Review: Samsung Series 7 UA46D7000
Bulgaria could suspend vote on ACTA
Internet in Iran severely disrupted as elections loom
Review: The Darkness 2 for Xbox 360
Nasdaq website disrupted by online attacks
Sir Richard Taylor named New Zealander of the Year
Mallard offers ticket cash back
Men in court after raid on Auckland apartment
Kiwis in cruise ship cocaine bust
No radiation leak on plane, says Fire Service
Abercrombie stars as Breakers shoot down Hawks
Dead pile up after Honduras prison blaze
No Kiwi jobs lost in call centre move: Orcon
Apple mobile apps stealing private data
Dragons deny wrongdoing as wee row erupts
15-minute-old newborn gets heart pacemaker
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Schoolgirl sex video man guilty
Sir Richard Taylor named New Zealander of the Year
Dazzling Adele silences critics
Kiwis in cruise ship cocaine bust
Mallard offers ticket cash back
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Sonny Bill Williams finds rugby boring: mate
No radiation leak on plane, says Fire Service
At what age is it OK for children to have a smartphone?