Malware

Android malware using TOR network makes debut

Life
Source: IDGNS

26 February 2014

Kaspersky Lab has spotted malware for the Android mobile operating system employing the TOR anonymity network, a development previously only seen on Windows.

TOR, (The Onion Router), is software that offers users a greater degree of privacy when browsing the Internet by routing encrypted traffic between a user and a website through a network of worldwide servers. TOR can also be used to host websites on a hidden network.

The Android malware uses a TOR website as a command and control server, wrote Roman Unuchek of Kaspersky. Command and control servers are used to send instructions to the malware.

Adding TOR functions to desktop malware programs is nothing new. The latest finding shows hackers are increasingly targeting powerful mobile devices, which often hold valuable personal data. The malware can intercept SMSes, and collect other data, such as a user’s phone number, the device’s IMEI and the country where the device is located and request GPS coordinates.

TOR-enabled websites, which included ones such as now defunct Silk Road marketplace, are denoted by “.onion” at the end of their URL. TOR websites are difficult to trace because the network masks the site’s true IP address, making it difficult to know which hosting company supports it.

Unuchek wrote that using a TOR site as a command and control server makes it “impossible to shut down”.

The malware, Backdoor.AndroidOS.Torec.a, uses a package of software, called Orbot developed by The TOR Project that enables TOR on Android.

The malware doesn’t try to pretend to be Orbot in an attempt to get people to download it but instead “simply uses the functionality” of the Orbot client, Unuchek wrote.

Adam Kujawa, lead of the Malware Intelligence Team at Malwarebytes, wrote on his company’s blog that the malware may be known as Slempo and be part of a botnet called Stoned Cat. Advertisements seen by Malwarebytes show that the cost of renting the botnet is $1,000 up front and then a $500 monthly subscription fee, he wrote.

Using TOR may make the malware’s communication harder to trace but also puts a strain on a mobile device.

“We recommend keeping an eye out for any data usage increases from your mobile device, over-power consumption (running a constant TOR connection will drain your battery faster) and any other kinds of odd behaviour,” Kujawa wrote.

Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service
jeremy_kirk@idg.com @jeremy_kirk

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