As part of Google's efforts to track the activities of commercial spyware vendors, the company's Threat Analysis Group (TAG) released a report Thursday on spyware campaigns targeting Android and iOS users.
Google TAG researchers Benoit Sevens and Clement Lecigne go into detail about the use of entrepreneurial grade spyware dubbed "Hermit." This sophisticated spyware tool allows attackers to steal data, private messages and make phone calls. In their report, TAG researchers attributed Hermit to RCS Labs, a commercial spyware vendor based in Italy.
Hermit poses many significant dangers. Due to its modularity, Hermit is quite customizable, allowing the functions of the spyware to be altered to the will of its user. Once fully situated on a target's phone, attackers can harvest sensitive information such as call logs, contacts, photos, precise location, and SMS messages.
An explainer:What is 'hermit spyware' and how can you protect yourself from it?
Sevens and Lecigne's full report details the ways in which attackers can access both Android and iOS devices through the use of clever tricks and drive-by attacks. Potential targets of this scam will have their data disabled through their ISP carrier before sending a malicious link via text to get them to ‘fix’ the issue. If that doesn't work, targets will be tricked into downloading malicious apps masqueraded as messaging applications.
Just last week, cybersecurity firm Lookout reported the use of Hermit by agents working in the governments of Kazakhstan, Syria, and Italy. Google has already identified victims in these countries, stating that "TAG is actively tracking more than 30 vendors with varying levels of sophistication and public exposure selling exploits or surveillance capabilities to government-backed actors."
The Milan-based company claims to provide "law enforcement agencies worldwide with cutting-edge technological solutions and technical support in the field of lawful interception for more than twenty years." More than 10,000 intercepted targets are purported to be handled daily in Europe alone.
When reached out for comment by The Hacker News, RCS Labs said its "core business is the design, production, and implementation of software platforms dedicated to lawful interception, forensic intelligence, and data analysis" and that it "helps law enforcement prevent and investigate serious crimes such as acts of terrorism, drug trafficking, organized crime, child abuse, and corruption."
Still, the news of the spyware being used by state government agents is concerning. Not only does it erode trust in the safety of the internet but it also puts at risk the lives of anyone a government considers an enemy of the state such as dissidents, journalists, human rights workers, and opposition party politicians.
"Tackling the harmful practices of the commercial surveillance industry will require a robust, comprehensive approach that includes cooperation among threat intelligence teams, network defenders, academic researchers, governments, and technology platforms," Google TAG researchers wrote. "We look forward to continuing our work in this space and advancing the safety and security of our users around the world."
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Google warns of 'hermit spyware' infecting Android and iOS devices-燕尔新婚网
sitemap
文章
65
浏览
41913
获赞
2481
Portland bans facial recognition tech, despite Amazon's lobbying
The city of Portland just took the fight against facial recognition up a notch. Late Wednesday afterBlack hole shot a beam through space. NASA snapped stunning footage.
The M87 galaxy is monstrous. It contains several trillionsof stars, compared to our Milky Way's hundThis nearby dwarf planet's ice may be left over from a dirty ocean
Plutois the most famous dwarf planet, due in part to its very public demotion from ninth planet of tThe sun is teeming with intense activity, NASA footage shows
Our medium-sized star is experiencing intense activity. Fortunately, this solar activity is normal,GMC revives gas
It may seem like an oxymoron that the massive, gas-guzzling GMC Hummer, once known as a symbol of ovSnapchat's 'My Places' feature is like Google Maps for food and drinks
What if Google Maps, but more Snapchat?That's what the new "My Places" feature on the disappearing mNASA puzzles over why some exoplanets are shrinking
As astronomers have used large telescopes to scan the skies for exoplanets, they've noted somethingWebb reveals that's no star over there. It's an entire freaking galaxy.
On the back end of a telescope, looks can be deceiving.Two decades ago, astronomers spied somethingHolocaust denial is now banned on Facebook
Facebook is expanding its recent crackdown on dangerous conspiracy theories to include Holocaust denCheck out NASA's next space station. It won't orbit Earth.
As the International Space Stationnears its retirement in 2030, NASAand its contractors are workingSnapchat's 'My Places' feature is like Google Maps for food and drinks
What if Google Maps, but more Snapchat?That's what the new "My Places" feature on the disappearing mIf the Webb telescope detects these molecules, they may point to life
Considering humans don't have a spacecraftcapable of traveling to planets beyond the solar system, sFaceTime gets an upgrade on iPhone 12, just in time for the pandemic
Apple unveiled its iPhone 12 lineup at its October event, and one feature that should be pretty usefHow to view the Northern Lights in the U.S. this weekend
The Northern Lightsare set to make another appearance over the next few days, bathing the sky over tNASA dropped a new report. It's a wake
Consequences, they say, collect in low places. A new NASA analysis, using data collected from differ