Ruchna Nigam provides an overview of more than 60 mobile malware families.
The rise of mobile malware is still a relatively recent thing, with the first actual mobile botnets not appearing until the beginning of this decade.
However, since then things have changed quickly, and today there are more than one million known mobile malware samples (though not families) in existence and mobile malware is almost as common as malware targeting desktops (even if there are some fundamental differences between the two).
Today, we publish a paper by
Fortinet
researcher Ruchna Nigam, in which she presents a timeline of mobile botnets.
Not only does Ruchna list more than 60 mobile botnets (including well-known names such as Zitmo, NotCompatible, Xsser and DroidKungFu) and provide basic information on all of them, she also takes a closer look at some particularly interesting variants.

Location-grabbing functionality in Android/SmsHowU, discovered in September 2010.
Moreover, in her paper Ruchna takes a look at how mobile malware, not unlike malware targeting desktop operating systems, uses anti-debugging tricks, code obfuscation and traffic encryption.
She finishes her paper by providing some statistics on mobile botnets, including the C&C channel used, the motivation behind the malware and the kinds of certificates used to sign the APK files.
You can read the paper
here
in HTML format or
here
as a PDF. (Remember that all content published by
Virus Bulletin
can be read free of charge, with no registration required.)
Ruchna’s paper was originally presented at and published by
Botconf 2014
and was republished with permission. My review of the 2014 edition of Botconf can be found
here
. The call for papers for its third edition, which will take place 2-4 December in Paris, France, can be found
here
.

Posted on 30 March 2015 by
Martijn Grooten
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