MANAMA: As many as 2,604 devices in Bahrain are affected by unwanted push notifications every month, shows an analysis of prevented threats by cybersecurity and anti-virus provider Kaspersky.
In just a month, 131,764 users across Egypt, the UAE, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Jordan and Oman were subjected to unwanted push notification appearance, it was revealed.
All in all, such notifications were prevented from appearing 971,153 times.
Unwanted notifications cannot be classified as malware and are technically described as potentially unwanted objects.
While originally they were meant as a tool for rapid information of users on breaking news, today they can be exploited to target shell websites visitors, filling their devices with unsolicited ads and sometimes links to potentially dangerous websites.
To achieve that, users are hoaxed into subscribing to notifications, for example, by passing subscription consent off as some other action.
The victim ends up subscribed to ad deliveries, while at the same time quite unable to get rid of the annoying messages, being unaware of their source or origin.
Egypt has become the most targeted country with 34,654 users facing unwanted push notifications with 302,963 cases.
It is followed by UAE with 26,028 affected browsers and 185,695 pop-ups and Kuwait with 5,451 and 41,712 devices and detected pushes accordingly.
Users with such issues were also detected in Saudi Arabia with 43,304 targeted users facing 290,130 pop-ups.
In addition, similar cases were noticed in Bahrain (2,604 attacked users), Jordan (7,089) and Oman (7,118).
Commenting on the phenomenon, Kaspersky security expert Artemy Ovchinnikov sought to reassure users overwhelmed with push notifications that spam is a part of global trend.
“We see a continuous increase of the role of programmes in a ‘grey zone’ which cannot be classified as malware, yet cause lots of disturbance and cause difficulties when working on a spammed laptop. Since their beginning in 2015, unwanted push notifications have been detected more and more often and now we see tens of thousands of them in some countries,” he added.
“The threat is relatively new. But there is good news and it is easy to get rid of – users do not need specific coding skills to turn them off by themselves by accessing browser settings, or installing a simple security solution on their device.”
Mr Ovchinnikov has recommended that where possible, users should block all subscription offers, unless they come from popular and trusted websites.
He also advised that users stay vigilant to ensure they were not redirected to a fake website.
“If you’re unable to avoid an unwanted subscription, block it in the browser settings. Start using a reliable security solution that blocks ad and scam push subscription offers in browsers, can delete subscriptions that have already been approved, and has an anti-phishing feature,” the expert added.
avinash@gdn.com.bh