Protecting Mobile Data: Just Kill Me Now
Written by Evan SchumanToday’s smartphones certainly promise more convenience and functionality. But for IT, these devices promise new nightmares about protecting the data they store. It’s not merely contact data, but files, slides, traffic history, E-mail records, chat transcripts and almost anything else that can be done on a desktop and synched to a smartphone. Then there’s the Grand Poobah of data protection night terrors: Geolocation.
Geolocation is the phone’s capability to tell any app on that phone—or anyone at all, really—the exact location of the phone virtually every minute it has power. Such data is relatively small in size and yet—tied into various other data points (especially time and date)—could be monstrously helpful to some while being stunningly destructive to others. But fear not, IT execs are thinking, there’s no way such data could ever get out to unauthorized places, right? Sprint this month proved otherwise, as we discuss in this week’s Guest Column on McAfee’s Security Blog.
Cards issued by European banks when used online cross border don't usually support AVS checks. So, when a European card is used with a billing address that's in the US, an ecom merchant wouldn't necessarily know that the shipping zip code doesn't match the billing code.
-Marc
