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Chrome 17 and Chrome Android Beta to fight malware? They'd better

This week Google made two major moves to address the growing malware problem on mobile in general and on its Chrome and Chrome on Android, in particular, Google execs said this week.

The major feature of Chrome 17 and Chrome for Android Beta, both just out this week, is malware detection. Both now do on the fly detection of potentially infected exe and msi files. High time. For IT to manage and deal with the increasing number of employees relying on their own Android mobile devices and their own choice of browser, Google needs to get things right. The right time is now.

Debacles like the recent Android.Counterclank adware/spyware on 13 games and apps in Google Market — four of the 13 stayed up on the Market days after Symantec identified them — do nothing but make IT wary.

And for good reason. Google needs to give enterprise a clear message about what it intends to do regarding malware on its various platforms and services.

This graphic, from McAfee, shows the prevalence of Android Malware:

Graphic above, courtesy: McAfee

To be fair, it isn’t all on Google’s shoulders. The explosion of mobile devices and the lack of knowledge by users on how to block malware are US and global problems. The following stats come from NQ Mobile:

The issue that should concern IT above all is what stats show criminals do with their potentially sensitive and certainly insecure information.

And it’s not just a US problem. Look at this!

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Gina Smith

Gina Smith
Gina Smith is an award-winning tech journalist and New York Times best-selling author of iWoz: How I Invented the Personal Computer and Had Fun Doing It (WW Norton, 2006). Her latest book, co-authored with former AIG Europe chief, Herta Von Stiegel, is The Mountain Within: Leadership Lessons For Your Climb to the Top. (McGraw, 2011). She was among the first five employees at CNET in the early 1990s and most recently led the relaunch of BYTE. For Tech Republic, she is focusing on the consumerization of IT. She's also editorial director at the consumer tech site, aNewDomain.net, with John C. Dvorak and Jerry Pournelle.