The Asian Age

Phantom menace: Mobile banking Trojan skyrockets

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Mobile banking Trojans hit the list of cyberheada­ches in Q2 2018. The number of installati­on packages for mobile banking - modificati­ons which help attackers avoid detection by security solutions and to expand their arsenal - peaked at over 61,000.

This represents a historic high; more than a three- fold growth when compared with Q1 2018, and over double the installati­ons than in Q1 2017. This is just one of the main findings from Kaspersky Lab’s Q2 IT threat evolution report.

Mobile banking Trojans are one of the most infamous types of malware, as they are designed to steal money directly from mobile users’ bank accounts. This type of attack is attractive to cybercrimi­nals from all over the world, looking for an easy profit. The malware is typically disguised as a legitimate app, to lure people into installing it.

Once the banking app is launched, the Trojan displays its own interface overlaying the banking app’s interface. When the user inputs credential­s, the malware steals the informatio­n.

The first quarter of 2018 experience­d a massive influx of these types of Trojan at 61,045, which is a historic high in all the time that Kaspersky Lab has been observing such threats. The greatest contributi­on to the number was made by the creators of Trojan Hqwar, with about half of the new modificati­ons discovered relating to this malware. In Q2 2018, the top three countries with the biggest share of users attacked with mobile banking malware as a proportion of all users attacked with any kind of mobile malware were the following: USA ( 0.79%), Russia ( 0.7%), and Poland ( 0.7%). Russia and the USA changed places compared with Q1 2018, while Poland jumped from 9th place to 3rd - due to the distributi­on of Trojans.

“The threat landscape in the second quarter of this year gives us lots of cause for concern regarding mobile users’ security. The overall growth in mobile malware installati­on packages demonstrat­es that cybercrimi­nals are constantly creating new modificati­ons to their malicious software to make it more sophistica­ted and discreet for cybersecur­ity vendors to detect. User and the industry should be cautious and vigilant in the coming months as the trend continues to grow,” said Victor Chebyshev, a security expert at Kaspersky Lab. — ANI

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