Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Digital Security Issues: Malicious Software, A Virus

 I think my telephone has a type of malicious software that makes me believe that my cell has a virus. Sometimes, it will fool me into believing that my security measures are old. In turn, they offer new updates for my security settings. So I do not know what to do.

This Link is to a page for solutions

9 Tips to know is your mobile phone have a virus:

  1. Excessive data usage: Undetected viruses running in the background of your phone may significantly increase data usage.
  2. Unauthorized charges: Some forms of trojans may drive up your phone bill with in-app purchases and text charges to premium accounts, which hackers can then collect on.
  3. Apps crashing: Apps may repeatedly crash if your mobile software is compromised. Before searching for a virus and assuming the worst, check that your storage isn’t full and you don’t have too many apps running simultaneously.
  4. Unusual search engines: Many people have a primary search engine they use for search queries. If your searches are being answered by new or unrecognizable search engines, this could be a sign that a virus has infected your phone.
  5. Pop-ups: While some pop-ups are a normal function of advertising while browsing the web, if your browser is closed and you’re experiencing increased pop-ups, you may be experiencing adware, a type of malware whose goal is data mining.
  6. Increased battery drain: You may experience an inexplicably quick drain on your battery with the increased use of your phone’s RAM if a virus is running in the background.
  7. Unrecognizable apps: When you see unrecognizable or fake apps that were mysteriously downloaded, they may be malware. Trojan horses can also attach themselves to legitimate applications and cause further damage.
  8. Overheating: Malware can consume RAM and CPU quickly, causing your phone to overheat. While occasional overheating may be normal, a chronic issue could be a signal that there’s something more dangerous afoot.
  9. Fraudulent linking: Malware may gather sensitive data and attempt to infect your contacts by sending dangerous links and attachments through texts, emails or social media messages.


Antivirus software is the most fail-safe way to protect your mobile phone from viruses, and the most famous method.

Clear the Cache. The first item on your checklists is your browser. If you visited some suspicious pages, some data will still be stored, navigate to settings and selects Apps & notifications. Next, find your browser of choice (in our example Google Chrome), go to its storage and select Clear Cache.

Reboot the device. Press and hold the power button, when the dialogue box appears, choose reboot to activate "safe mode".

Find suspicious Apps. Open your settings. Select Apps. Tap See all apps and enter Installed apps in the drop-down menu. Manually review applications to find any suspicious downloads. Once identified, open the app information and uninstall or force close it. After this step, you can restart your phone like normal.

Enable Play Protect. The most secure way to protect an Android against a virus is by installing an antivirus, but Play Protect can be used as a secondary protection measure. To enable this built-in software, enter the Google Play Store app and open the menu under your avatar. Choose to activate Play Protect so it can scan your device for security threats.

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