It's another first for the Android mobile operating system, and not the good kind: The first genuine Android encrypting-ransomware Trojan has been detected. Simplocker, as the malware has been dubbed by security researchers, sneaks onto Android devices, secretly encrypts most of the files stored on the phone's SD card, locks the phone and then demands that users pay up in order to get their files and control of their phones returned to them. But it's growing fast — although Simplocker was first detected less than a month ago, variations of the malware are already using the Tor privacy network to hide their tracks.



More...