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NSA recommends rebooting a phone every week to Stop Hacking

NSA recommends rebooting a phone every week to Stop Hacking

As a member of the secretive Senate Intelligence Committee, Sen Angus King has reason to worry about hackers. At a briefing by security staff this year, he said he got some advice on how to help keep his cellphone secure.

Step One: Turn off the phone.

Step Two: Turn it back on.

That’s it. At a time of widespread digital insecurity, it turns out that the oldest and simplest computer fix there is — turning a device off then back on again — can thwart hackers from stealing information from smartphones.

Regularly rebooting phones won’t stop the army of cybercriminals or spy-for-hire firms that have sowed chaos and doubt about the ability to keep any information safe and private in our digital lives. But it can make even the most sophisticated hackers work harder to maintain access and steal data from a phone.

Almost always in arm’s reach, rarely turned off, and holding huge stores of personal and sensitive data, cellphones have become top targets for hackers looking to steal text messages, contacts, and photos, as well as track users’ locations and even secretly turn on their video and microphones.

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“I always think of phones as like our digital soul,” said Patrick Wardle, a security expert, and former NSA researcher.

The number of people whose phones are hacked each year is unknowable, but evidence suggests it’s significant. A recent investigation into phone hacking by a global media consortium has caused political uproars in France, India, Hungary, and elsewhere after researchers found scores of journalists, human rights activists, and politicians on a leaked list of what were believed to be potential targets of an Israeli hacker-for-hire company.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Technology Express staff and is published from a syndicated feed)

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