Recently, ESET has informed about the porn clicker trojan masquerading as popular app called Dubsmash, which has been uploaded on and pulled from Google Play multiple times.
ESET has continued with its analysis of this malware, discovering other 51 different applications on Google Play, each with more than 100,000 installs carrying the trojan clicker.
It is no longer only Dubsmash that is used to infect its victims, but plenty of other popular app as well, such as Clash of Clans 2, Subway Surfers 2 and 3, Minecraft 3, game cheats for Grand Theft Auto or various Video Downloaders and Download Managers.
“A telling characteristic they all share is mainly the fact that they have been uploaded by the same developer, using the same Android/Clicker, with a capability to avoid Google malware filtering each time,” says Lukáš Štefanko, Malware Researcher at ESET.
In 3 months, the fake Dubsmash has returned to Google Play at least twenty-four times.
“Following ESET’s notification, Google has pulled all the reported malware-ridden apps from its store and now also reports some of them as potentially harmful applications using its built-in security service,” concludes Štefanko.
Read the sequel to the porn clicker Trojan on WeLiveSecurity.com.
About ESET
Since 1987, ESET® has been developing award-winning security software that now helps over 100 million users to Enjoy Safer Technology. Its broad security product portfolio covers all popular platforms and provides businesses and consumers around the world with the perfect balance of performance and proactive protection. The company has a global sales network covering 180 countries, and regional offices in Bratislava, San Diego, Singapore and Buenos Aires. For more information visit www.eset.com or follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.