Eugene Kaspersky said 99 percent of mobile attacks are towards Android-based phones, since Apple has strict controls and does not allow third-party applications.
The most disturbing trend in cyber-attacks was a growing shift to mobile devices from computers and a major cyber-attack using mobile phones was bound to happen since cellular users are not properly protected, he told Reuters.
"I expect something really bad to happen to change people's minds and awareness," he said, noting that it took the Chernobyl virus in 1998 for people to properly protect their computers.
"Cyber-crime is moving to mobile but people are not aware. It's still not as big as computer crime but it's growing fast. The trend is a very dangerous situation," he said at a cyber-tech conference in Israel, where he wants to open a research and development lab.
Kaspersky Lab is an international group operating in almost 200 countries and territories worldwide. The company is headquartered in Moscow, Russia, with its holding company registered in the United Kingdom. Kaspersky makes one of the top-selling anti-virus programmes in the United States, where it has gained market share in recent years against products from Symantec Corp, Intel's McAfee and Trend Micro. According to the company's 2012 unaudited financial results, Kaspersky Lab's global revenue grew by 3% compared to the previous year and reached $628 million.
He said it was hard to determine where most cyber-attacks are coming from geographically but cyber criminals typically speak Chinese, Spanish, Portuguese and Russian.
Edited by NDTV staff from original story by Reuters
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