McAfee Mobile Study Documents Sophistication and Ubiquity of Risky Apps
Fraudsters Use Bad Apps to Steal Identities, Commit Financial Fraud, and Breach Privacy on Mobile Devices
SANTA CLARA, Calif. – February 19, 2013 – McAfee today released the results of its Mobile Security: McAfee Consumer Trends Report, documenting sophisticated and complex risky apps containing multi-faceted scams, black market crimes, drive-by
downloads and near-field communication threats. The report identifies a new wave of techniques hackers use to steal
digital identities, commit financial fraud, and invade users’ privacy on mobile devices.
Mobile platforms have become increasingly attractive to cybercriminals as consumers live more of their digital lives on
smartphones and tablets. According to IDC, mobile devices are surpassing PCs as the preferred way to access the Internet
and the number of people using PCs to go online will shrink by 15 million over the next four years, while the number of
mobile users will increase by 91 million.1 With the mobile space becoming a more enticing platform for online mischief,
the complexity and volume of threats targeting consumers will continue to increase. Using its extensive global threat
intelligence network (GTI), McAfee Labs analysed mobile security data from the last three quarters.
“Despite elevated consumer awareness of threats on mobile platforms, there is still a significant knowledge gap
surrounding how and when devices become infected and the level of potential damage,” said Luis Blando, vice president of
mobile product development at McAfee. “Cybercriminals are exhibiting greater levels of determination and sophistication
leading to more destructive, multi-faceted hacks that are harder to spot, and thus warrant a greater degree of security
and vigilance. Our goal in releasing this report is to help consumers understand the risks they face and learn ways they
can stay safe and compute with confidence on all of their devices.”
In the report, McAfee Labs identifies the following threats as the most severe existing and new trends consumers will
encounter in 2013:
Risky Apps: Cybercriminals are going to great lengths to insert infected apps into trusted sources such as Google Play and the risks
within each app are becoming more intricate. As a matter of fact, McAfee Labs found that 75 per cent of the
malware-infected apps downloaded by McAfee Mobile Security users, who are apt to be more security conscious than the
average consumer, were housed in the Google Play store, and that the average consumer has a one in six chance of
downloading a risky app. Nearly 25 per cent of the risky apps that contain malware also contain suspicious URLs, and 40
per cent of malware families misbehave in more than one way.
A risky app may allow someone to:
> Steal personal information such as banking, email or wireless account details and combine that with location data
to put together a complete picture of who you are
> Perpetuate fraud such as an SMS scam that will charge you without your approval
> Abuse a device by making it part of a criminal bot network, which allows someone to remotely control your phone
Black Market Activity: Botnet clients, downloaders, and rootkits are generic, useful software sold on black markets as part of software
toolkits. Criminals use these to commit premium SMS and click fraud, spam distribution, data theft, or bank fraud – and
the complexity of these criminal activities is growing. Commercial criminals are now reusing and recombining these
components to devise new, profitable schemes.
Drive-by Downloads: The first mobile drive-by downloads were seen in 2012 and we expect these to increase in 2013. On a mobile device, a
drive-by download fools a user into downloading an app without knowing it. Once a user opens the app, criminals have
access to the device.
Near Field Communication: In 2013, we expect to see criminals abuse the tap-and-pay near field communications (NFC) technology used in mobile
payment programs, or “digital wallets.” This scam uses worms that propagate through proximity, a process we can call
“bump and infect.” The distribution path can quickly spread malware through a group of people such as in a
passenger-loaded train or at an amusement park. When the newly infected device is used to “tap and pay” for the next
purchase, the scammer collects the details of the wallet account and secretly reuses these credentials to steal from the
wallet. Worm malware like this will spread by exploiting vulnerabilities on devices. This development would monetise the
11.8 per cent of malware families that already contain exploit behaviours.
As the mobile space evolves, criminals will look at ways to generate revenue from features only mobile devices have.
During 2012, about 16 per cent of malware families detected by McAfee attempted to get devices to subscribe to premium
SMS messages. In 2013, we foresee an increase in threats that will have users finding out they bought premium apps only
when they check their bills.
For a full copy of the Mobile Security: McAfee Consumer Trends Report from McAfee Labs, with additional threats, please
visit: http://www.mcafee.com/us/resources/reports/rp-mobile-security-consumer-trends.pdf
Additionally, for tips on how to stay safe from mobile threats, visit: http://home.mcafee.com/advicecenter/?id=ad_ms
1 IDC Predictions 2013: Competing on the 3rd Platform, doc #238044, November 2012
About McAfee
McAfee, a wholly owned subsidiary of Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC), empowers businesses, the public sector, and home
users to safely experience the benefits of the Internet. The company delivers proactive and proven security solutions
and services for systems, networks, and mobile devices around the world. With its Security Connected strategy,
innovative approach to hardware-enhanced security, and unique Global Threat Intelligence network, McAfee is relentlessly
focused on keeping its customers safe. au.mcafee.com