A senior Australian crime official has raised serious security concerns over popular smartphones such as Apple’s iPhone, which he warned was particularly vulnerable to hacking and information theft.

John Lawler, head of the Australian Crime Commission, said the virtual world had brought “boundless opportunities” for crime gangs and mobile technologies were giving criminals “previously unimaginable” reach.

He singled out the iPhone as especially at-risk, explaining that it was the “third most used system in the world” for businesses and “deployed or piloted by more than 70 per cent of Fortune 100 companies”.

“Yet IT managers are swimming against the phone’s tide of popularity because they can’t centralise installation and security updates as with other software,” said Mr Lawler.

“This overwhelming desire for instant services (comes) at the expense of security safeguards.”

Mr Lawler said organised criminals could breach unprotected devices or fool users into giving access to malicious programs which planted viruses or could harvest lucrative information for fraud.

The “explosive” advent of mobile technology had also triggered a shift in information storage from hard-drives to online “cloud” sites like Hotmail and Gmail, posing complex problems for crime-fighting agencies, he added.

“People are embracing this because they can access applications or data from anywhere in the world via any number of devices other than a computer,” he said.

“With cloud computing, where is the computer system? Where is the data? How do we gain access? How do we deal with cross-jurisdictional issues?

“Where is the victim and where were they when the crime occurred?”

An entire criminal enterprise had sprung up around Apple’s smartphone, he said, with an imitation iPhone racket in Italy and sophisticated siphoning scam worth €4.5 million linked to devices in London.

The comments come after the German government banned ministers and senior civil servants from using iPhones and BlackBerrys to guard against cyber-attacks.

An Australian student breached iPhone security last November with a worm which spread from phone to phone along wireless networks, and could have been used to read text messages, emails and other information stored on the device.

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