Shoulder Surfing: What is it and how to Protect Yourself?

 

The Wall Street Journal reported last month on a recent trend in phone theft: Thieves in major cities want more than just expensive smartphones; they also want the users’ PINs. What’s the reason? A stolen phone may fetch a good price on the black market, but the financial information stored behind your phone’s PIN can be worth tens of thousands of dollars more. 
The most common method for a thief to learn a phone’s PIN, or passcode, is “shoulder surfing,” which means the thief literally observes the owner entering their phone’s PIN and then decides to steal that person’s phone. After stealing it, the thief can use the observed PIN to unlock it, then change the PIN and even account passwords for the owner’s online services.
After stealing it, the thief can unlock it using the observed PIN, then change the PIN and even account passwords for the owner’s online services, effectively locking the owner out of remote tracking of the stolen phone and removing their ability to remotely delete data from the stolen device. That PIN also grants the thief access to numerous financial apps on the stolen phone, which he or she can then use to transfer money from the victim’s accounts.
Shoulder surfers can target anyone, whether they use an iPhone or an Android device, and especially if they use a simple 4-digit PIN to unlock their phone, as the majority of people do.
This article has been indexed from CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents

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