Fake WhatsApp documents being used to trick people into downloading and installing viruses onto their phones

The messages look like they include useful attachments – but the truth is far from it

Andrew Griffin
Tuesday 03 January 2017 08:18 EST
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The Facebook and WhatsApp applications' icons are displayed on a smartphone on February 20, 2014 in Rome
The Facebook and WhatsApp applications' icons are displayed on a smartphone on February 20, 2014 in Rome (AFP/Getty)

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The next WhatsApp message you open might lead to your whole life being stolen.

Criminals are using the hugely popular chat app to break into people's phones, distributing viruses and harvesting personal information.

The latest warnings have been distributed to India's centrals security agencies.

Messages apparently aimed at members of the police, army and security organisations are receiving messages that apparently come from organisations including India's National Investigation Agency. But when the documents are opened up, they in fact include a host of viruses that make their way onto the phone.

Once that has happened, the files are able ot extra personal information like login details and banking details, according India's Economic Times. The problem appears to be limited primarily to Android phones.

The hack is just the latest example of malicious criminals using WhatsApp as a way of stealing details or money from people. Those scams take a number of different forms, but are primarily delivered through the form of a message that looks harmless or useful but is in fact able to take over the device.

As such, security experts advise that people never click suspect looking messages – whether on WhatsApp or anywhere else. Even if a friend appears to send a message it is worth checking whether that attachment was legitimately sent, since viruses are often able to spread themselves by looking like more ordinary messages.

How to best prevent being hacked

WhatsApp introduced document sharing as part of a recent update apparently intent on making the chat app into more of a useful platform for work. But it also adds extra vulnerabilities, because documents like Excel spreadsheets and PDFs can include viruses.

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