An Android
backdoor developed by the Italian surveillance software maker Hacking Team is
capable of bypassing the Google Play screening process. The threat is designed
to allow the company’s customers to install spyware on smartphones, Trend Micro
reports.
Researchers continue to
analyze the 400GB of data leaked as a result of a breach suffered by Hacking Team. So far,
experts have identified several of the resources offered by the company to its
customers, including zero-day exploits,
an UEFI rootkit, and tools designed to facilitate attacks against
non-jailbroken iOS devices.
One of the tools developed
by Hacking Team for targeting Android devices was disguised as a news application
called BeNews and uploaded to Google Play. The name BeNews, which belongs to a
defunct news website, was likely used to make the app look more legitimate.
Google removed the
application from the Play store shortly after the Hacking Team breach came to
light, but the app had already been downloaded 50 times.
The backdoor, which
Trend Micro detects as ANDROIDOS_HTBENEWS.A,
made it past the Google Play filtering process because it doesn’t contain any
exploit code and it requests only three permissions during installation.
However, once victims
start using the fake news app, the malware uses a technique called dynamic
loading to download and execute additional code from a server. The backdoor
works on Android versions 2.2 through 4.4.4 and it exploits a local privilege
escalation vulnerability (CVE-2014-3153) in Google’s mobile operating system to
achieve its goal.
Trend Micro has pointed
out that the same vulnerability was exploited by TowelRoot, a
piece of Android malware capable of breaking the device’s protection
mechanisms, and opening the door for other malware that can be leveraged to
gain remote access.
Based on an analysis of
source code and documents containing instructions on how to use the backdoor,
experts believe Hacking Team has been providing the app to customers as a lure
for getting the company’s Android spyware on a target’s device.
Hacking Team initially
said the leaked information allows anyone to deploy the company’s software,
including terrorists and extortionists. However, the firm later noted that the
exposed systems are now obsolete because the leaked information makes them easy
to detect.
The spyware maker has
pointed out that important elements of source code have not been accessed by
the attacker, and now the company is preparing to launch a completely new version of Remote Control System, its flagship
surveillance product.
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