- In an attempt to take advantage of the
popularity of free photo-sharing app Instagram among smartphone users,
malware writers have created fake Instagram websites to distribute
Android Trojan horses, according to security researchers from antivirus
firms Sophos and Trend Micro.
Originally developed for Apple's iOS devices, Instagram allows
smartphone users to take photos, apply various digital filters to them
and share the resulting images on social networking websites. There are
over 30 million registered Instagram accounts as of April 2012,
according to its creators.
At the beginning of April, an Android
version of the app was released on Google Play and it was downloaded
more than one million times during the first 12 hours.
The
company that developed Instagram was acquired by Facebook for almost $1
billion on April 12, which attracted the attention of the media and, as
it usually happens with popular events, that of cybercriminals.
"We discovered a spoofed web page containing a rogue version of Instagram," Trend Micro fraud analyst Karla Agregado said in a blog post on Tuesday. "The said web page mimics Instagram's legitimate download page."
The fake Instagram website contains text in Russian and distributes an Android
Trojan horse that, once installed, sends SMS messages to premium-rate
numbers without the phone owner's authorization, said Graham Cluley,
senior technology consultant at Sophos, in a blog post on Wednesday.
The
rogue app's installer, also called the APK, contains several pictures
of a man that has been the subject of a photobomb-type meme in Russia. A
large number of random images with this man's picture digitally added
into them can be found on Russian websites.
It's not clear why
the creators of this Android malware decided to include this photo into
the malicious APK, but it isn't the first time this has been done. In
February, security researchers from Symantec reported about server-side polymorphic Android malware that contained the same picture.
SOURCE:www.bbc.co.uk
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