Why Spring
clean your mobile devices ?
Even
mobile devices need a spring cleaning to ensure the latest in productivity and
security enhancements.
Spring
cleaning is for more than just your house. Even mobile devices can benefit from
an annual cleanup, which amounts to an OS update so that users can get the
latest in productivity and security enhancements.
David
Lingenfelter, the information security officer at Fiberlink, an IBM company
about mobile device maintenance in a corporate environment, offered tips for a
spring cleaning for mobile devices in corporate, Corporate Owned Personally
Enabled (COPE), and Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) environments.
Mobile
devices are an extension of us according to Lingenfelter. To me, this position
should be central to how consumer and business users maintain their mobile
devices.
Make updates and
upgrades to mobile devices
Lingenfelter
is an advocate of making sure that mobile devices have the latest OS updates.
"Really
it comes down to if you are behind the times on your operating system you are
missing a lot of security opportunities and enhancements," Lingenfelter
said. "iOS comes out with an update every few months and typically they
are minor typically some smaller features."
According
to Lingenfelter, "Without doing these upgrades and updates you really lose
a lot of the functionality in general of the device as they continue to upgrade
and add new features."
"But
then from a security perspective you start to lose touch with how secure you
are on the device," Lingenfelter said. "That plays even more
significantly in the Android world where the Android market is quite fragmented
as far as what version of the OS goes on what phone. So not only are we talking
about the software being up to date is your phone still 'updatable'?"
He
said if your Android phone was purchased more than two years ago, it may not
even be able to run the latest Android version. Samsung and some other third
party smartphones may not even support the latest Android version either.
"These
are all things you need to think about and make sure you are taking care of at
least periodically and spring is the right time to do that," Lingenfelter
said.
Delete
unwanted apps and data from devices
Downloading
mobile apps is made all too easy these days. I always have to download and
delete apps as part of one writing project or another or so it seems.
"Just
making sure you only have things on the device you are using and that plays
into overhead on the device," Lingenfelter said. "Each of these apps
in particular on the Android side can be running in the background and taking
up CPU, memory, and certainly storage space on both Android and iOS."
He
raised some interesting questions we should all ask about the unwanted apps on
our mobile devices:
Are
they constantly communicating to the outside world?
Are
they asking for updates?
Are
they running advertisements?
Are
they chewing through your data minutes?
What
documents have people taken onto their device with the app? What exposure do
they open up for the company?
That's
the other reason why you want to delete unwanted material. Just because you
aren't using it anymore. You could be taxing device resources as well as space
when you leave unwanted apps on your device.
User
IDs and passwords could still be floating around on the device with unused
corporate apps according to Lingenfelter. Corporate and BYOD mobile devices
need to run with just the corporate mobile apps the user requires.
Organize your
mobile devices for business and pleasure
"From
a professional perspective, I don't know too many people who are using
corporate phones just for corporate purposes. The whole point of these phones
is so you can use them for everything in your life," he said.
Lingenfelter
advised using secure containers for isolating corporate data from the users
personal apps and information
"If
the person has a personal Dropbox account, for example, you don't want them
taking your corporate information and moving it over to Dropbox. You don't want
them taking their corporate emails and sending then out through Gmail or
whatever personal email they have," he said.
Latest mobile
security threats
When
asked about the latest mobile security threats, Lingenfelter said, "From a
threat perspective, the numbers of apps compromised on the Android side
continues to grow."
He
advised that businesses look to establish enterprise app stores of safe mobile
apps for their users.
Lingenfelter
was also quick to point out that both iOS and Android suffered from encryption
issues last year that had ramifications for corporate and personal device
users.
"Those
are threats that aren't at the app layer, but at the entire device layer,"
Lingenfelter said. "So making sure you are aware of these latest threats
helps you reinforce the need to keep the phones up to date and clean and get
rid of the old apps you don't use anymore."
Use top apps to
increase productivity
Fiberlink
monitors top mobile apps through their app white list.
"In
2013, Adobe Reader was very popular to have on your devices," Lingenfelter
said. "Obviously, a very corporate application but has a lot of uses on
the personal side."
Google's
mobile productivity apps also ranked high on Fiberlink's white list along with
Box and Dropbox.
"Citrix
Receiver is another one that people are using to further complement the
separation of corporate and personal data," Lingenfelter said. "So
you've got your email, contacts, and calendar within our secure container and
maybe you are in the process of building some apps or web apps that you don't
necessarily want the data down on the device. Some people then use our SPS
[Secure Productivity Suite] product and Citrix Receiver as well."
I'm
going to put in my own plug in for the recently released Microsoft Office for
iPad because it's going to have a positiveinfluence on enterprise mobility in
businesses that are standardized on Office 365.
Conclusion
Mobile
device maintenance needs to grow and mature in many organizations. Lingenfelter
brings up some simple approaches that need to become part of how corporations
and individual users can put in place that don't require extensive technical
expertise by keeping current with OS updates and keeping unnecessary apps off
your devices.
Corporations
can lead the change in how their users think of mobile device maintenance by
introducing best practices through user outreach and education. Keeping mobile
OSes and apps up to date is easy enough for even non-technical consumer users.
It just has to be made a habit, much in the way spring cleaning is a habit in
many homes.
I
think it's time for me to go clean up some of my mobile devices.
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