Fast discharge of the smartphone, the appearance of strange notifications or spam when the screen is locked, blocking antivirus programs - all this may indicate that malicious software is installed on the device.
Experts named an unnaturally fast discharge of the battery as one of the main signs of hacking. As a rule, such software runs in the background on your phone, significantly eating up the battery power. Self-restart of the phone is another sign of hacking.
Dmitry Galov, a cybersecurity expert at Kaspersky Lab, pointed out that when it comes to banking Trojans, miners, spyware and stalker software, whose task is to remain unnoticed for as long as possible, there are only a few indirect signs of infection.
"These signs include fast battery discharge, despite the fact that the phone may be new, the device overheating, the consumption of a large amount of Internet traffic, the appearance of strange notifications or unfamiliar programs that you did not install. And this is not a complete list," Mr. Galov said.
According to him, it is possible to correctly answer whether the device is infected only with the help of antivirus. However, if the device is hacked, the antivirus software may be blocked for unknown reasons, even restarting the phone will not help.
"If the user finds signs of infection with a miner or a banking Trojan on the smartphone, then he needs to check the device with an antivirus and remove the malicious software", the Kaspersky Lab expert explained.
Before deleting stalker programs, the expert recommends thinking about whether this step will create an even greater danger: "the initiator of surveillance will most likely find out about this soon, and it is unknown what the next steps of the attacker will be."
In the first half of 2021, the Russian mobile games market was among the world's top five leaders in terms of downloads. Therefore, hackers began to actively attack Russians playing on smartphones. In online games with prizes, attackers can crack the code to get rewards instead of honest participants. In games with registration, hackers hunt for the personal data of players.
According to forecasts, the volume of the Russian video game market by the end of this year is expected to amount to $2,236 million. Along with the growing interest of consumers in video games, the activity of hackers and scammers is also growing.
Basically, the key to obtaining personal data, logins and access to the victim's computer is phishing. There are various schemes: from simple chat correspondence with malicious links to fraudulent sites where players are offered to improve statistics, download various hacks containing keyloggers or spyware.
It is quite simple to distinguish a game in which there is a chance to meet a dishonest player. You just need to find out if the application is using any anti-cheat (software for tracking and preventing the use of funds for cheating), as well as how often it is updated. Such information can be found in the public domain, often the developers of a particular game write about it themselves.
According to Panda Security in Russia and the CIS, cryptojacking malware can also be added to the current problems of gamers. Cryptojacking is the use of devices (computers, smartphones, tablet PCs, or even servers) without the knowledge of their owners for the purpose of hidden mining of cryptocurrencies.
The best way not to become a victim of such fishing is not to download pirated software. If the user notices that the PC or mobile device has become slower or fails, then there is a high probability that the gamer is unknowingly "mining" cryptocurrency for hackers.