Computers vs. Smartphones

By Allyson Westcot


Many business people won't go anywhere without their smartphones, and often have a number of applications on their phones that require logins. Unfortunately, it's been discovered that about 75% of these smartphone apps don't encrypt usernames and passwords nearly well enough, or at all, to protect these things adequately.

If you use your smartphone to login at any website, your password might be the only thing encrypted. Your username might not be protected, so anyone monitoring you can grab it. That's one less number or word they have to figure out before they can gain complete access into whatever you're using. Your passwords may even be vulnerable sometimes.. If your smartphone stores usernames, passwords or even credit card information, that information might be sitting there just waiting for the person with the right tools to grab it.

A rugged laptop, on the other hand, can be as safe and secure as necessary. You can generally purchase built-in security ranging from virus protection to things like biometric access. A good firewall, anti-virus protection and heavy encryption should be enough for most people.

LinkedIn is a business social site where network and advertise their skills and experience. Unfortunately, along with sites and applications like WordPress and Skype, your login data isn't protected when you login with a smartphone. Yahoo Mail, Gmail and Netflix are also very popular online programs that don't keep your information safe enough when logged in through a phone.

Some users may also find that their banking information isn't that secure via phone. Facebook, Amazon, Twitter and other wildly popular sites also store info unencrypted if you access them through a phone. Why rely on a phone that has a small chance of being secure enough when you could use a computer with lots of security? Using a computer is the best choice for logging into sites that you're not sure are secure.




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