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APT C-23 Spyware Targets MiddleEast

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New variants of Android spyware linked to a Middle Eastern APT group have been designed to be stealthier and more persistent.

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This malware appears as an update app with a generic icon and name “App Updates” and it’s distributed as a download link in a text message sent to the victim’s phone. When a victim runs the app, it requests permission to control different parts of the phone. The attackers use social engineering to convince victims this control is necessary.

The spyware disguises itself under the name and icon of a legitimate app once the permission is granted, making it harder for the user to find and remove it. The new variants have more and varied disguises than earlier versions and hide behind the icons of popular apps like Google, Chrome, Google Play, and YouTube. Once upon clicking the icon the spyware launches a legitimate version of the app while conducting surveillance in the background.

The malicious features of earlier iterations are the same: gathering text from SMS and other apps, contacts, call logs, documents, and images; recording ambient audio along with incoming and outgoing calls; taking pictures and screenshots; recording the device’s screen; reading notifications from social media and messaging apps; and canceling security app notifications.

The C-23 APT has been active in the Middle East since 2017, and these new variants detected share code with other malware samples attributed to the group. Researchers also found Arabic language strings in the code and report some of the text could be presented in English or Arabic, depending on the language setting of a victim’s device.

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