[h1]Android Smartphones Hijacked by First Mobile Botnet[/h1]
By
John E Dunn, Techworld.com Jul 6, 2012 12:17 pm
Researchers have spotted evidence of what could be the first extensive
global smartphone botnet running on compromised Android devices owned by subscribers in a range of developing countries.
In
a brief blog airing the evidence, Forefront Online Security engineer Terry Zink said he'd noticed that pharmacy spam coming through Yahoo's email service were signed with the telltale 'Sent from Yahoo! Mail on Android' signature at the end of each message.
An examination of the embedded IP addresses showed they came from Chile, Indonesia, Lebanon, Oman, Philippines, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, Ukraine, and Venezuela.
"All of these message are sent from Android devices. We've all heard the rumors, but this is the first time I have seen it -- a spammer has control of a botnet that lives on Android devices. These devices log into the user's Yahoo Mail account and send spam," said Zink.
The most likely explanation was that the infected users had installed a rogue app from an unapproved Android market, he said.
"I am betting that the users of those phones downloaded some malicious Android app in order to avoid paying for a legitimate version and they got more than they bargained for. Either that or they acquired a rogue Yahoo Mail app," wrote Zink.
"This is the next evolution in the cat-and-mouse game that is email security," he added, referring to longstanding fears that malware authors would start building mobile bots to complement the hordes that already hosted on infected Windows PCs.
[h2]Security Firm Spots Spam, Too[/h2]
Security
firm Sophos confirmed Zink's research, agreeing that the spam has been coming from legitimate Yahoo accounts.
"It is likely that Android users are downloading Trojanized pirated copies of paid Android applications. The samples we analyzed originated in Argentina, Ukraine, Pakistan, Jordan and Russia," said Sophos's Chester Wisniewski.
Should the average Android in the U.K. and U.S. user be unduly worried? Not really. The counterfeit "wrapper" apps that set up this botnet are unlikely to have come from Google Play, the renamed and somewhat reformed market the search giant set up to fix previous criticisms that it wasn't vetting apps on its marketplace. Criminals will be using non-approved download sites to entrap users.
It does underline that mobile networks and devices are often barely undefended, making it easier to build mobile bots than previously assumed. The new evidence is the first verifiable evidence of an Android botnet being built on any scale using compromised subscribers.
The bot (or bots) in question could also be substantial given that subscribers from multiple countries appear to be involved. Mobile bots are harder to spot -- or perhaps fewer researchers are looking for them -- which suggests this one could have been around for some time.
"Android users should exercise caution when downloading applications for their devices and definitely avoid downloading pirated programs from unofficial sources," said Wisniewski.
"Google, Amazon and others may not be perfect at keeping malware off of their stores, but the risk increases dramatically outside of their ecosystems."
Google later issued a statement that refuted the botnet claims. "The evidence does not support the Android botnet claim. Our analysis suggests that spammers are using infected computers and a fake mobile signature to try to bypass anti-spam mechanisms in the email platform they're using," reported ZDNet.