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Killer Apps & Mobile Menaces: Mobility's Fallibilities

By David Meyer / October 27, 2010 / Contact Reporter
Business Travel News on X

At the same time that mobile itinerary management apps are opening up possibilities for business travelers to be more efficient on the road and more effectively tracked and supported by travel managers, they also have the potential to make travelers and their companies vulnerable to new risks.

While some mobile apps literally can open doors for travelers, without proper protections mobile devices can open companies to corporate espionage, expose confidential information to theft, provide access to previously secure enterprise networks and compromise the safety and property of travelers.

At the same moment that some companies are embracing itinerary management services like TripIt and WorldMate that can help them track travelers and offer social networking opportunities to share rides or information that can facilitate business meetings, some are beginning to clamp down on unsecure mobile tracking solutions and unprotected company data.

"We need to have a little more conversation about where the balance is between convenience and safety and security," travel security company IJet president Bruce McIndoe recently told Business Travel News.

IJet has been piloting mobility tracking solutions with a couple of companies that McIndoe said "understand there is a certain amount of freedom that people need to go out and surf for information and get itinerary-related information. They're OK with that, but disclosing company information or where you are outside of the privacy of their shell, they are not going to allow. The TripIts and the WorldMates that put this information on LinkedIn are not going to happen because being time- and place-predictable increases your threat level by orders of magnitude. It's robmyhouse.com."

While acknowledging that TripIt users can decide to share their itineraries with others, including through Facebook and LinkedIn, TripIt's Scott Hintz, cofounder and vice president of business development, said users have to take proactive steps to do so and can suppress any individual itinerary. Hintz also noted that TripIt, which has relationships with BCD Travel and more than 20 other travel management companies, has built in strong privacy and security controls and has "passed some very detailed security audits from major financial services institutions."

What McIndoe is concerned about, however, is "another environment where itineraries are being exported out of the trusted provider stream, and we need to look at who is controlling that and who has access to that.

"When I get on LinkedIn and see three guys saying, I'm going to be here on this trip, then if I'm a corporate espionage guy or someone who would rob your house or go after you particularly, I have been handed that information on a silver platter. What people don't understand is that a product marketing manager or a senior-level person at a company or an intelligence officer is who I want to get access to. If I know where they are and what they're doing, that's solving 80 percent of my problem."

While individual safety and property is a major concern, the very whereabouts of certain individuals also can compromise business deals and competitive activities. Instead of providing an open channel to track the movements of individual travelers, IJet is developing a more secure solution that only informs the company of a traveler's location when the traveler is in a secure place. McIndoe said it's "like an OnStar on your hip. It opens a channel to an operator and transmits your location, but there's no Big Brother watching. We're taking that model with these two clients so that we can blast out to the devices a message that says the company would like to determine where you are, and then you can say yes or ignore. Saying yes activates a GPS signal that shows where they are. It's more of an opt-in strategy. I think that's a model that will play well, ultimately."

McIndoe also warned about other pitfalls of smart devices. Travelers who carry confidential contact lists and e-mail addresses risk them being stolen, copied or lost. Hackers also may have the ability to enter otherwise secure corporate intranets through the phones' virtual public networks or Bluetooth devices.

A study of mobile telephone security published in June by independent researchers Don Bailey and Nick DePetrillo, "The Carmen Sandiego Project," examined the risks posed to travelers by such telecommunications networks and databases as GSM phones and caller ID systems. Their research shows how easily caller ID systems can be used to identify individuals and how their mobile devices can be used to track them and to intercept their data. It also advises individuals and organizations about how they can mitigate such threats.

DePetrillo, who subsequently joined Harris Corp. subsidiary Crucial Security as a security researcher, told BTN that such threats are particularly dangerous for executives who are meeting to conduct sensitive negotiations for potential acquisitions or in areas where they might be subject to kidnapping.

"One of the most basic ways that companies can be exposed to threats from their mobile phones is through their caller ID footprint. By using techniques that we outline in our research, anyone using a GSM phone anywhere in the world is vulnerable," DePetrillo said. "It's not the GPS device that puts it at risk, it's the phone's back end."

By asking the cellular network where the phone is currently roaming, the network will divulge the phone's general location and when the phone's owner travels to another area. "Someone can use that information to exploit a person, attack them or follow their behavior," DePetrillo said. "What companies should do is contact their mobile provider and have them make their mobile phone caller IDs unavailable or private so they won't show up in a search."

Not all providers are vulnerable, as one in the United States recently made changes in reaction to security concerns that mitigated this, he said.

Through threat modeling, companies can assess risks and create policies for employees to limit their exposure when appropriate. When traveling on sensitive trips, employees should consider not using their regular phone. Depending on the employee, DePetrillo said, "you might consider switching out someone's phone every couple of months to avoid malicious applications that create a back door to company information. Literally unwrapping new phones ensures you are going to have a clean phone. One of the best things a business can do is review internal policies and do proper threat modeling for specific executives and create new policies to protect themselves. They have to be vigilant and go the extra steps because it really could be a billion-dollar deal that you put at risk."

DePetrillo warned that bad applications that can spy on people or steal passwords have found their way into app stores. Data on mobile phones also can be at risk. "Malicious code can be installed on phones not just from an application but the operating system can be exploited through other means," he said. "Sending malicious text messages to a user can compromise the phone. You can only take steps to mitigate the dangers to the cellular phones and the data stored on them, but you can never be 100 percent protected. Users can set passwords on phones or encrypt storage memory to help secure phones."

Research from such companies as Independent Security Evaluators and Lookout indicates tablet computers, such as the iPad and one coming to market soon based on the Android operating system, are just as vulnerable as the phones via their cellular modems and Wi-Fi.

DePetrillo also cited research by Vericode's Tyler Shields that shows that malicious applications can turn on cell phone microphones so that an attacker can record the audio and eavesdrop on sensitive business conversations.

To thwart such intrusions into corporate privacy, McIndoe, DePetrillo and others recommend corporate IT departments take full control of devices that travelers use on the road—if their corporate culture permits it—monitor the channels through which they access the company, establish policy and provide training for travelers using such devices.

This report originally appeared in the Oct. 25, 2010, issue of Business Travel News.

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