Tizi Android malware highlights the importance of security patches for high-risk users

A well-known security researcher once

said

: “if you purposely choose Android you are either Poor, Cheap, or really hate Apple.”


Android

has a bad reputation in security circles, though these days that is less because of a lack of effort on

Google

‘s part and more because of the prevalence of many older devices with unpatched vulnerabilities.

It is easy to make this problem seem bigger than it is. The typical

Android

vulnerability still requires an app to be installed which, on non-rooted devices, means that the app first needs to get onto

Google Play

– this is something that malware manages to do, quite regularly, and sometimes with a worryingly large number of downloads.

However, the prevalence of such

Android

malware is still small compared to that of

Windows

malware and may, for the average home user, not justify the cost of a new phone.

For users with a more advanced threat model, things are different though. A good example of this is ‘Tizi’, a backdoor family

discovered

by researchers from

Google

, which used various apps found on

Google Play

. The malware used one of nine vulnerabilities, all patched between 2013 and 2015, to obtain root on a device which was then used to record calls, siphon out messages, and access personal information.


It is unclear what kinds of users were targeted by this malware, but interestingly, some 80% of installations were found in Kenya, once again highlighting that malware is a truly global problem. (Those who attended Tyrus Kamau’s VB2017

talk

“The state of security in Africa: Kenya” will, of course, not be surprised by this.)


tizipiechart.png


Tizi installations by country. Source: Google.

Targeted malware attacks are certainly not limited to powerful intelligence agencies, and victims may be targeted for political, business and sometimes very personal reasons, as the widespread

use of spyware in domestic abuse cases

shows. For such potential victims, using a phone that will receive security patches is an important first step in their digital defence.


Finally,

Google

deserves credit for taking down this malware and for implicitly admitting that its efforts to keep

Google Play

malware-free are not 100% successful. That too, is an important first step.


Posted

in

by

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *