Site icon Check Point Blog

Mobile Security Weekly – Why Is iCloud Raining On Us?

There is only one story dominating the tech sites worldwide at the moment. The celebrity picture scandal has brought a lot of unwanted attention in Apple’s direction. That isn’t to say that Android should come out of this a winner – this time it was iCloud, next time it could be something else. Blame is being thrown every which way – just make sure your enterprise uses the misfortune of Jennifer, Ariana, Victoria and the rest to protect itself in the future.

The latest celebrity scandal exposes mobile security
Much has said on the topic of the biggest tech headline this week. With the iPhone 6 launch just a week away, Apple are surely turning to the stars to see what they’ve done to anger the gods.

The security of iCloud is at the center of the scandal after hackers allegedly exploited weaknesses in the iCloud service (within the Find My Iphone feature, to be exact) to gain access to the private accounts of stars including Jennifer Lawrence, Kate Upton & Kim Kardashian. Apple is claiming that iCloud isn’t to blame and this is rather a matter of the users’ choice and protection of their own personal credentials.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/09/03/smut_slingers_sell_out_friends_to_pervert_hackers_for_nude_pics/

This is the way we see it. Regardless of who is to blame, let’s look at the facts. Whether you’re a celebrity or a security professional trying to gain control over the Consumerization of IT, cloud services, social network apps and mobile browsers make up a huge chunk of the time spent on a mobile device.

In the world where BYOD is part of most enterprises, there are a couple of critical takeaways here:

Exit mobile version