
The opening up of the mobile industry is great news for application developers but
not so good for IT security professionals, according to experts. For example, Symbian, the single most widely used mobile software platform, has already wrestled with the dangers of openness to third-party developers, said Khoi Nguyen, group product manager in mobile security at Symantec. Symbian 7 and 8 were fairly open and allowed almost any application to be installed and run. This led to a few hundred viruses being introduced within a couple of years, so Symbian 9 was locked down significantly, he said.
Member since:
2006-02-05
But what techniques you are using to implement them are. If you know exactly how security is implemented, that knowledge is better to have then not to have when attacking it. If that is all that is protecting you, it isn't enough. But a well implemented security scheme that nobody knows of is more secure then a well implemented security scheme that everyone has the source code to.