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A view of an illegal oil refinery is seen in Ogoniland outside Port Harcourt in Nigeria's Delta region March 24, 2011. Crude oil thieves -- known locally as "bunkerers" -- have been a fact of life for years in Africa's biggest oil and gas industry, puncturing pipelines and costing Nigeria and foreign oil firms millions of dollars in lost revenues each year. REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye (NIGERIA - Tags: CRIME LAW ENERGY)

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Android bug opens devices to outside control: experts

BOSTON | Fri Feb 24, 2012 3:59pm EST

BOSTON (Reuters) - Cybersecurity experts have uncovered a flaw in a component of the operating system of Google Inc's widely used Android smartphone that they say hackers can exploit to gain control of the devices.

Researchers at startup cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike said they have figured out how to use that bug to launch attacks and take control of some Android devices.

CrowdStrike, which will demonstrate its findings next week at a major computer security conference in San Francisco, said an attacker sends an email or text message that appears to be from a trusted source, like the user's phone carrier. The message urges the recipient to click on a link, which if done infects the device.

At that point, the hacker gains complete control of the phone, enabling him or her to eavesdrop on phone calls and monitor the location of the device, said Dmitri Alperovitch, chief technology officer and co-founder of CrowdStrike.

Google spokesman Jay Nancarrow declined comment on Crowdstrike's claim.

Alperovitch said the firm conducted the research to highlight how mobile devices are increasingly vulnerable to a type of attack widely carried out against PCs. In such instances, hackers find previously unknown vulnerabilities in software, then exploit those flaws with malicious software that is delivered via tainted links or attached documents.

He said smartphone users need to prepare for this type of attack, which typically cannot be identified or thwarted by mobile device security software.

"With modifications and perhaps use of different exploits, this attack will work on every smartphone device and represents the biggest security threat on those devices," said Alperovitch, who was vice president of threat research at McAfee Inc before he co-founded CrowdStrike.

Researchers at CrowdStrike were not the first to identify such a threat, though such warnings are less common than reports of malicious applications that make their way to online websites, such as Apple's App Store or the Android Market.

In July 2009, researchers Charlie Miller and Collin Mulliner figured out a way to attack Apple's iPhone by sending malicious code embedded in text messages that was invisible to the phone's user. Apple repaired the bug in the software a few weeks after the pair warned it of the problem.

The method devised by CrowdStrike currently works on devices running Android 2.2, also known as Froyo. That version is installed on about 28 percent of all Android devices, according to a Google survey conducted over two weeks ending February 1.

Alperovitch said he expects to have a second version of the software finished by next week that can attack phones running Android 2.3. That version, widely known as Gingerbread, is installed on another 59 percent of all Android devices, according to Google.

CrowdStrike's method of attack makes use of a previously unpublicized security flaw in a piece of software known as webkit, which is built into the Android operating system's Web browser.

Webkit is also incorporated into other software programs, including Google's Chrome browser and the Apple iOS operating system for the iPhone and iPad.

CrowdStrike said it had not attempted to create software to attack iOS devices or the Chrome browser.

Manufacturers of Android devices include HTC Corp, LG Electronics Inc, Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc and Samsung Electronics Co.

(Reporting By Jim Finkle)

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Comments (9)
AZWarrior wrote:
This points out Android’s main weakness. Unlike a “real operating system”, Google doesn’t regularly update the os. Therefore., there is likely holes in the security that remain open for an extended length of time. It is a bad thing for phones, but it may be a fatal flaw for tablet users. Android will be judged on it’s ability to deliver consumer’s rising expectations over a period of time longer that the average two year phone contract. As it stands now, Android may be better off being targeted just for phones, and have tablets use a more robust OS.

Feb 24, 2012 4:33pm EST  --  Report as abuse
SilentBoy741 wrote:
Yeah, that’s called phishing. It’s powered by the fact that the vast majority of users would click on a message titled “Would you like to have a virus installed on this device?”, as long as it has an “OK” button on it.

The weakness is human gullibility; there’s no patch for that coming any time soon…

Feb 24, 2012 5:36pm EST  --  Report as abuse
eMJayy wrote:
Hold your horses….This isn’t an Android bug at all! It’s a flaw in webkit and the researcher actually said that iOS was “equally vulnerable” to this attack. I’m surprised that Reuters got this story so wrong.

Webkit is simply the layout engine (the part of the browser that draws the pages on the screen) used in the default web browsers running on Android devices and Apple’s iOS devices as well as the default browsers on the Blackberry tablet OS, WebOS devices and the Playstation 3. It’s also used in Apple’s Safari desktop browser and Google’s Chrome desktop browser.

The only reason Android is being mentioned is because the researcher chose to use an Android device to demonstrate how to use the webkit flaw to take over a device. But he said he could just as easily have used an iOS device, since they all have the same zero-day webkit vulnerability.

In any case, what isn’t being highlighted here is the fact that on Android devices, you actually have the ability to use non-webkit browsers like Firefox and Opera to do your web surfing, thereby avoiding any webkit vulnerability issues entirely. On iOS you have NO CHOICE but to use the default webkit engine that is built into iOS because Apple doesn’t allow any third party browser apps into its app store that don’t use the default webkit engine to render pages. So on iOS, you’d be completely vulnerable regardless of which browser you’re running on your iOS device until the problematic webkit code is patched by Apple.

Feb 24, 2012 9:29pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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