Password creation policies are the enemy of secure... » Commenting on reports that a security developer has concluded that password-creation policies are th... Thousands of Young Adventurers kept safe with M2M ... » Thousands of teenagers taking part in the annual two-day Ten Tors Challenge across Dartmoor in Devon... avast! Free Antivirus for Mac tops CNET’s download... » PRAGUE, Czech Republic: Three days after its release avast! Free Antivirus for Mac shot to first pos... USB-Tischmikrofone von Imtradex gewährleisten schn... » TM2-LS und TM3 verbinden innovative Technik mit einfacher Handhabung Dreieich: Schnelle und einfach... Opengear wins Information Technology Industry’s 20... » Opengear ACM5504-5-G-I Remote Infrastructure Management Gateway Honored at Interop Interop, Las Veg... ISACA Speaker urges IT candidates to shift career ... » In-depth discussion to be held at INSIGHTS 2012 London, UK: Recruiting in the technology sector is ... Venafi hails FBI’s hotel-network security warning ... » London: “Everyone with an Internet connection has a stake in understanding the critical links in the... Is loaphobia causing workers to fear losing their ... » 19% missed a critical deadline because they couldn’t access the right applications, 14% lost a job a... Whoopee! £38 billion blackhole in Defence budget e... » Vigilance can report that the MoD’s budget deficit has been wiped out for the first time in a genera... Media Alert: DDoS tool (LOIC) downloads increasing... » Imperva's Application Defense Centre has been tracking the Anonymous DDoS tool, LOIC, and the number...

Advertise with Vigilance

Got News?

Got news for Vigilance?

Have you got news/articles for us? We welcome news stories and articles from security experts, intelligence analysts, industry players, security correspondents in the main stream media and our numerous readers across the globe.

READ MORE

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Information Security Header

Berkshire (UK): First identified in 2008, it would appear nomophobia – the fear of being out of mobile phone contact, is sharply increasing in the UK. A recent survey of 1,000 people in employment, conducted using OnePoll, discovered two thirds of respondents fear losing or being without their mobile phone.

The study, sponsored by SecurEnvoy – the global leader of tokenlessâ two-factor authentication, reveals that 41% of people interviewed, in an effort to stay connected, have two phones or more. When asked if they’d be upset if a partner looked at the messages and texts on their phone almost half said that they would.

Digging a little deeper, more women worry about losing their phones than men - 70% of the women surveyed compared to 61% of the men, yet it is men that are more likely to have two phones - scoring 47% and 36% respectively, perhaps in an effort to stay connected. When split by age it is the younger age group (18 – 24) that are more nomophobic at 77%, with the 25 – 34 age group second at 68%. Perhaps a little more surprisingly is that third most nomophobic are the 55 and overs!

“The first study into nomophobia, conducted four years ago, revealed that 53% of people suffered from the condition and our study reveals this has now risen to 66% in the UK and shows no sign of abating. A reversal on the 2008 findings is that, back then, it was men that were more afflicted yet today it’s women. I’d be inclined to draw the conclusion that, perhaps because more men have two phones, they’re less likely to misplace both and therefore be left phone-less,” said Andy Kemshall SecurEnvoy CTO and co founder. “There is another study into mobile phone use that found people check their phones, on average, 34 times a day so it wouldn’t take long for you to realise if you’d misplaced your device.”

Another interesting revelation from this study is that, with 49% of people getting upset if their messages and texts were viewed by a partner, they’re still lax at securing these devices. Forty-six percent do not use any protection at all; 41% use a four pin access code; and just 10% encrypt their device. A security conscious 3% use two factor authentication. Andy suggests, “With 58% of the respondents using at least one device for business use, this lack of security is a worrying trend that needs addressing.”

“What this study does highlight though,” concludes Kemshall “is the extent that people now rely on their mobile phones. At SecurEnvoy we have certainly seen a huge spike in demand from local government and the private sector looking to turn their staff’s phones into security devices, where they can use SMS tokenless two factor authentication to access data securely and easily whilst on the move.”

Add comment


Security code
Refresh