Growing popularity of smartphones and rising data usage in India is also making the country a favourite among cyber criminals, who are increasingly attacking mobile phones using malware.
India, the world's fastest growing handset market, is the fourth most affected globally by mobile malwares, a report by security solutions provider F-Secure today said.
According to F-Secure Lab's Threat Report H1 2014, India follows the UK, France and Saudi Arabia in reporting of mobile malware incidents.
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Top Android threats in Q2 were Trojans that either send SMS messages to premium numbers or harvest data from a device and forward it on to a remote server. Slocker malware reported in June, which pretends to be a legitimate app, was the first ransomware to appear on the mobile platform, it added.
Commenting on the India findings, F-Secure Security Advisor (ASIA) Goh Su Gim said: "India is seeing a rise in premium content SMS type malware."
Besides, mobile ransomeware is going to be the next wave of attack for handsets and it is being increasingly seen that these ransomeware is also targeting enterprises. Earlier they were confined to individual users, he added.
Ramsomware, a kind of malicious software, is designed to block access to a computer until a certain sum of money is paid. Generally, it targets individuals.
F-Secure India Country Head Amit Nath said there is a rise in botnet cases in India.
"India is also a center for botnets -- as bot infecting viruses like Ramnit and Sality are rampant. PC's in a botnet are used mainly by hackers for distributed denial-of-service (DDoS), spamming and possibly bitcoin mining," he added.
Bot is short for robot. Cyber criminals distribute malicious software that can turn a computer into a bot. These bots can be networked together as 'botnet' that can perform automated tasks over the Internet, without owners knowledge.
In mobile malwares, Chandigarh, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Chennai and New Delhi are thre top 5 infected cities, while tier II cities are becoming a favourite destination for mobile malwares.
"Many incidents as highlighted in our Threat report shows that cybercriminals constantly adapt to new trends whether by utilising new malware or targeted attacks techniques to continue with their attacks," Nath said.
In PC threats, of the top 10 detections, the largest share (31 per cent) were of six-year-old Downadup/Conficker worm. The worm has infected millions of computers in over 200 countries, the report said.
This worm's long life is mostly due to computers that run old software -- illustrating the importance of keeping a computer's software up to date, it added.