Eight apps affected by malware were able to achieve 3 million downloads from the Play Store



It Hunts Victims Through Facebook Ads

malware-alt-test-1

Android is definitely not a malware-free platform. If you stumble upon the wrong website and download the wrong APK, things can go awry very quickly. But it is generally accepted that by the time you get your apps from the Google Play Store, you should be mostly Free from malware, especially with initiatives like Play Protect, which are supposed to scan for any hidden villains. Still, sometimes the virus makes its way into Google’s firewall and users’ phones. A specific piece of malware, called Autolycos, was being bundled into several popular apps in the Play Store, resulting in it being downloaded more than 3 million times.

ANDROIDpolice video of the day

Security researcher discovered malware Maxim Ingrao (via Bleeping Computer). It was present in at least eight applications, all of which had been removed by Google at the time of writing – although it took the company six months to act from initial acknowledgment of the report.



funny camera

The way it works is that if left to run, the malware will execute the URL on a remote browser and inject it over HTTP requests instead of loading an external webview. It also requests permission to read SMS content, so infected apps can read your text messages, allowing them to steal things like one-time password codes.

Malicious apps are widely promoted through social media where it reaches users through advertising campaigns, most of them on Facebook. Users are tempted to download them with the promise of keyboard themes, good looking launcher apps and camera apps with great filters. In that regard, they are dominant with two of those apps reaching over a million downloads.

Infected apps, which have all been removed from the Play Store, include:

  • Vlog Star Video Editor (com.vlog.star.video.editor, 1 million downloads)
  • Creative 3D Launcher (app.launcher.creative3d, 1 million downloads)
  • Wow Beauty Camera (com.wowbeauty.camera, 100,000 downloads)
  • GIF Emoji Keyboard (com.gif.emoji.keyboard, 100,000 downloads)
  • Razer Keyboard and Theme (com.razer.keyboards, 10,000 downloads, not related to gaming/tech company Razer)
  • FreeGlow Camera 1.0.0 (com.glow.camera.open, 5,000 downloads)
  • Coco Camera v1.1 (com.toomore.cool.camera, 1,000 downloads)

If you (unfortunately) downloaded any of the above apps after seeing a Facebook ad, uninstall it now. Also, don’t download apps with ads, full stop – especially if you don’t know the developer.

Source



Related News

Google Pay is now Google Wallet: so you can update to the new version of the Android payment app

Google has done what Google loves to do: the application formerly known as Google Pay is renamed Google Wallet with the latest update. The payment service is

The Galaxy Z Fold4 and Flip4 leak in press photos

Just yesterday, an image published by Evan Blass I suggested that Samsung could hold your Galaxy Unpacked event to introduce the Galaxy ZFold 4 and to Galaxy

Intel Arc A770, Rivaling RTX 3060 Ti

Intel, which is selling Arc A380 graphics cards, is preparing to launch high-end graphics cards such as Arc A750 and Arc A770. Similar to NVIDIA's Founders

So you can make your Xiaomi mobile concentrate all the WiFi signal in a single app

The speed of the internet is measured in megabits per second (Mbps), it means that a megabit has 1024 kilobits (Kbps), therefore 1 Mbps is a thousand times

Android: why you should not charge your cell phone to 100%

Are you one of the people who leaves carrying the cell phone all night? Well, we tell you that this can be harmful not for you, but for your smartphone.

WhatsApp: how to save data when you make a call or video call

Do you run out of megabytes on your cell phone too quickly? WhatsApp is possibly responsible for doing so. The messaging application has an infinite number of