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Mobile Game Trojan Calls the South Pole

UgLyPuNk writes with an excerpt from Gamepron.com: "Freeware games can actually cost you more money than their pay-to-play cousins, as mobile gamers in the UK have learned. A 'booby-trapped' version of a popular Windows Mobile game has been sneakily spending their money while they sleep – by dialing phone numbers in the Antarctic behind their backs."

9 of 195 comments (clear)

  1. yikes by iwannasexwithyourmom · · Score: 5, Funny

    aw man, that's pretty cold.

  2. Did penguins answer ? by Arvisp · · Score: 5, Funny

    and what did they say ?

  3. Re:LOL by vivian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Crappy brain dead design strikes again.
    Why on earth are mobile phone apps even allowed to make calls in the first place, without some sort of specificaly made user authorization?

    Surely that should be something that has to be done on a per-application basis, and only after the user has allowed it by entering an authorization password to allow the app to access those parts of the phone!?
    There should also be a way to limit the number or costs of calls (per application) that is built in at the lowest possible level too.

  4. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  5. Re:Could someone please post the phone number by DarthBart · · Score: 5, Funny

    +88234-86-7-53-0-9

  6. Re:no phone numbers in antartic by pookemon · · Score: 5, Informative

    I originally modded you up - and then I did a search of my own.

    http://countrycode.org/antarctica

    Seems Wikipedia is not right about everything - go figure.

    --
    dnuof eruc rof aixelsid
  7. Re:LOL by profplump · · Score: 5, Informative

    And decent phones do. On a BlackBerry, for example, you have to specifically authorize each application to access to the voice radio, IP connections (as a whole or per-domain), GPS, address book, etc. It's easy to use and provides great protection, not to mention the instant insight into what a program is actually doing (i.e. "Why does this free calculator want to connect to warez.ru"). Why WindowsCE doesn't do such things is a complete mystery.

  8. Re:One really has to wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    +88234 is allocated to our company Global Networks Switzerland AG who operates a GSM network in Antarctica. The +88234 allocation is published by the ITU in the E.164 standard somewhere around 2003. As Antarctica is not considered a country according to the united nation but international territories, the +88234 allocation is out of the shared country codes block which is where you also find the satellite networks such as GlobalStar, Thuraya etc and also networks operating on Cruise Ships and similar. This is the main reason why operators charge a fortune. They don't differentiate +88234 in pricing from other networks in +882xx or +881xx which means you get charged sattelite connections even though our connection is much cheaper (and they make a hell of a lot of money off you). The connectivity to Antarctica goes over satellite to the edge of Antarctica to a research station (you can't reach the center over satellite). There is a second allocation +672 for antarctica for the australian Scott's base which is basically some kind of areacode of Australia. We have nothing to do with that network.

    About the abuse of the number for so called auto-dialers, malware in games etc, please be aware that we are not involved in this. People somewhere in the middle do break out those calls and terminate it illegally on their equipment charging termination fees and making money of it. Those calls do not end up on our switch where they would supposed to go. The numbers used in the dialers are not in use in our network so calling them would result in a "unallocated number" error and you would not have been charged.

    If you get charged for calls to +88234-8.... complain to the operator as it clearly points to shortstopping by a 3rd party.
    Our legitimate users use mainly +88234-7xxx xx xx with a few allocations in +88234-4... and +88234-5...

    Regards

    Andreas Fink
    CEO
    Global Networks Switzerland AG
    afink at gsm.aq

  9. Re:Profiting is the easy part by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Funny, back when I used to work in toll fraud at one of the Big Three, we regularly had overseas calls in the $3-4 range per minute. A popular destination was Vanuatu along with some other Pacific islands, easily the most expensive of them all. I never really understood porn over voice. Any time I saw the country codes for Pacific islands, I blocked them immediately. Another popular destination for toll fraud was 809, which was part of NANPA but still counted as overseas (Caribbean islands) and thus ran up big charges quickly. The most expensive fee per minute I ever saw was a puzzling destination of INMARSAT. What kind of country is that, I thought to myself as I dialed the number to check what it was. Seaman Mumble picked up the call, it was the bridge of a Navy destroyer! INMARSAT was/is a satellite communications provider for ships at sea. $5.50 per minute, the highest I ever saw.

    The point of this rambling post is that toll fraud seems much cheaper these days. Fifty cents a minute to Antarctica seems like nothing compared to rates back in the day.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!