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The carefree days for the Palm handheld are over. A Trojan horse -- a program that poses as a beneficial application, yet does something completely different -- is making its way through the underground circles of Palm users.
Ardiri created the program to initialize a Palm device to a "messy" state, which he said was equivalent to what would happen after several years' use.
"I was writing a new program for the Palm, called Sweeper, that will find old databases and preferences and clean them up," he said in a phone interview from Sweden. "I use this software to set up a new environment."
According to
According to Ardiri, who has done some research on how to prevent his programs from being "cracked," one of the handful of people he gave the test program to must have distributed it.
Other, mostly anonymous, posters on PalmStation.com, are blaming Ardiri for releasing the program himself to get back at a community that distributed hacked versions of his applications. Ardiri was a co-creator of the Liberty emulation program. Cracking applications, known as warez, have been the bane of many software developers. "Scum like you belong in the piranha tank," flamed one anonymous poster.
"What should really come out of this is a bit of user awareness," he said. That's especially true because personal digital assistants have little security.
While the Palm's lack of security has appalled many security specialists, most users are generally not worried about losing their data, in part because it is so easy to create a backup by synchronizing the device.
"There are a lot of possibilities for spreading viruses on a PDA," said Nachenberg. "And it will become more of a problem as these devices become more and more connected."
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