Last week saw yet another successful edition of
Mobile Pwn2Own
, the contest in which participants are challenged to attack fully patched mobile devices using previously unknown vulnerabilities.
Contests like these, and their desktop equivalents, serve two purposes: device manufacturers have vulnerabilities responsibly disclosed to them, while offensive security researchers are able to show off their skills, and get a nice cash prize as a bonus.
One possible message to be taken away from the contest is that every single device ended up getting “pwned”; another, however, would be that it has become increasingly hard to do so. In the case of the
Samsung Galaxy S8
, for example, it took the attackers no fewer than
eleven vulnerabilities
to execute code and maintain persistence on the device.
But both of these messages miss the point regarding the way in which almost all attacks against mobile devices happen: they don’t exploit known or unknown vulnerabilities, rather they exploit the human factor.
In a typical “attack”, the phone’s owner is tricked into installing an app, either because it is supposedly necessary, because it promises great things, or maybe just because it is indistinguishable from the real app – which is what made
one million users
install a rogue version of
WhatsApp
.
And this is also why, no matter what
Pwn2Own
‘s results may suggest,
iPhone
remains the more secure mobile operating system. Not because of inherent properties of the system itself, but because its strictly controlled environment does a far better job at protecting its users against themselves, even if this protection comes at a cost: earlier this year,
Apple
decided its Chinese users needed to be “protected”
against the use of VPNs
.
This does not make
iPhones
100% secure though, and we have seen a few
cases
where an
iPhone
zero-day was used to compromise the device of a very few targets. But such attacks are rare, and for almost all users attacks like this are a much smaller risk than the chance of they themselves inadvertently opening up their device to an adversary. This is the reason why, for users that are a high-value target, I always recommend an
iPhone
or a similarly locked-down device (even if I myself am perfectly happy with my
Android
phone).
And it is also why I believe that using a third-party security app to augment a device’s security is a very sensible thing to do, especially on
Android
, even while acknowledging the limited powers such apps have by design.
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