Top 5 signs your phone is infected with a virus and how to handle it effectively
Below are signs that your phone has been infected with malware or dangerous viruses. Please refer to them.
After using the phone for a long time, different phenomena may arise. But if your phone is infected with malware or a virus, your social network accounts and even your personal information will be threatened.
Signs that your phone is infected with a virus
Ads don't go away on their own
If you suddenly see a lot of ads in a particular app, or even when no apps are open, your phone may be infected with adware. These ads may ask you to tap them to infect your device with worse malware, or link to phishing websites.
The device is hotter than usual
Your device becomes hot to the touch even when not in use. When you accidentally download malware, the hardware inside the device immediately starts working harder to "support" the embedded malware or virus. This causes your device to be hot to the touch or even very hot.
A phone that gets hot and runs out of battery quickly is a warning sign of a virus infection.
Suddenly a notification asking to upgrade appears
This phenomenon occurs when accessing a website using the phone's browser such as Firefox, Chrome, Opera. Your phone will naturally pop up new notifications with content such as: 'Your Android phone is too old so upgrade to new software immediately', 'Your device is too slow so download new software' , 'Your phone is infected with a virus. Need to scan now!'. Accompanied by that, the phone vibrates strongly, emitting strange ringing sounds and sexy images,.
These notifications are actually created by Hackers, to trick users into following the actions instructed in the notification. Thereby stealing information, stealing money from accounts or even appropriating the right to use the user's computer. Therefore, you should absolutely never click on any pop-up ads if you do not want your smartphone to become even more sluggish.
Call drops and poor connection
If your phone has been infected with malware, outgoing connections to foreign servers may prevent your phone from maintaining a stable Wi-Fi or cellular connection, leading to poor connection quality and calls. frequently interrupted. If other devices on the same Wi-Fi connection are working properly, malware may already be present on your phone.
Suspicious application
Sometimes, an app you download may contain malware that installs additional programs. Take a look at your app list and make sure you recognize the apps you've downloaded. If you see an app that looks suspicious, don't open it.
How to handle when your phone is infected with a virus
If your phone is unfortunately infected with a virus, you can immediately apply the solutions below:
Scan virus
If you can't find anything suspicious on your own, you may need the help of a good antivirus program like BitDefender, Kaspersky, Norton, and McAfee. These programs are all designed to identify and remove any malware it finds.
Reset the device
One of the effective ways to handle a virus-infected phone is to restore factory settings. This will wipe your data and remove any malware in the process. If you have a backup of your data from before your device was infected, you can try restoring your device to that time.
As a general rule, you should only grant access to features that your app needs. Furthermore, you should also regularly update your device and never install applications from sources other than the App Store (iPhone) and CH Play (Android). These notes will ensure your phone is safer from malware found on the internet.
How to prevent your phone from getting a virus
- Stay away from software applications of unknown origin, do not install games or Crack applications.
- Do not visit websites or applications that have fraudulent advertising to install malicious software on your phone.
- Remove all foreign software. To ensure safety, you should only install truly necessary applications such as Facebook, Messenger, Zalo, Zing Mp3. downloaded from the application store.
- Be wary of attachments and only open them from trusted sources (do the same with embedded links).
- Be wary of emails that look as if they're coming from companies you're working with.
If something slightly different happens with any activity you're doing on your phone, question it right away and ask yourself whether continuing is worth the trade-off in phone functionality, or a the amount of data it holds.
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