An hour later, I was seated back in my room located two offices down the hall. As I flipped open my laptop, I noticed a message from my Bluetooth application seeking permission for another partys device wanting to connect with my laptop. Not recognizing the source, I declined the request. Im a suspicious person by nature so I immediately exited my room and yelled out the requesting devices name for its owner among my staffers to come forward. Seconds later, a colleague stood up and confessed that his Nokia 6600 unit had been acting up all morning and in fact, had infected other mobile units in the room via the same come-on I got earlier. Wow, talk about coincidental room-to-room threats!
This virus I learned was called the CommWarrior and it strictly affected Series 60 smartphones with Symbian OS 6.1 or newer operating systems. I was amazed that this virus had two alternative means to attack a mobile phone: via MMS and Bluetooth! Although removing the virus only required a file management tool, the glimpse of the future I just witnessed was frightening. This virus could herald a new age of malicious and fast-spreading cellphone threats. Now dont go panicking and hurriedly searching for a security solution just yet. This threat still requires you to accept the installation of the virus before its installed on your mobile phone. So unless youre very determined to install it and for that matter you probably work for an anti-virus software company and are trying to hype the dangers so that we all would rush out and buy your product, I believe the chances of this happening to you today are the same as being hit by a runaway train.
So relax and just be more prudent in accepting any type of file, even from known sources. I do see more smartphone threats coming in the future, but for now, your PC is probably under much greater risk of attack.