Researchers publish secret details of cops' phone-surveillance malware


Kaspersky Labs (Russia) and Citizen Lab (University of Toronto) have independently published details of phone-hacking tools sold to police departments worldwide by the Italian firm Hacking Team (here's Kaspersky's report and Citizen Lab's). The tools can be used to attack Android, Ios, Windows Mobile and Blackberry devices, with the most sophisticated attacks reserved for Android and Ios.

The spyware can covertly record sound, images and keystrokes, capture screenshots, and access the phones' storage and GPS. The tools are designed to detect attempts to search for them and to delete themselves without a trace if they sense that they are under attack.

Hacking Team insists that its tools are only sold to "democratic" police forces, but Citizen Lab's report suggests that the tool was used by the Saudi government to target dissidents.

The means of infection is device-specific. If police have physical access, it's simple. Android devices can be attacked by infecting a PC with a virus that installs the police malware when the device is connected to it. This attack also works on jailbroken Iphones.

The Android spy module, for example, uses obfuscation to make it harder to reverse-engineer and examine the module. And before installing itself on machines, Hacking Team's main spy tool has scouting agents that conduct reconnaissance to identify anything on a system that might detect it.

Once on a system, the iPhone module uses advance techniques to avoid draining the phone's battery, turning on the phone's microphone, for example, only under certain conditions.

"They can just turn on the mic and record everything going on around the victim, but the battery life is limited, and the victim can notice something is wrong with the iPhone, so they use special triggers," says Costin Raiu, head of Kaspersky's Global Research and Analysis team.

One of those triggers might be when the victim's phone connects to a specific WiFi network, such as a work network, signaling the owner is in an important environment. "I can't remember having seen such advanced techniques in other mobile malware," he says.

Hacking Team's mobile tools also have a "crisis" module that kicks in when they sense the presence of certain detection activities occurring on a device, such as packet sniffing, and then pause the spyware's activity to avoid detection. There is also a "wipe" function to erase the tool from infected systems. Hacking Team asserts that this will uninstall and erase all traces of the tools, but Citizen Lab discovered that initiating a wipe on some mobile phones creates telltale signs. On a BlackBerry, for example, it causes the device to automatically restart. On Android devices, the uninstall can, under certain conditions, cause a prompt to appear onscreen asking permission from the user to uninstall an application called "DeviceInfo"—the name the Android spy tool uses for itself.

Researchers Find and Decode the Spy Tools Governments Use to Hijack Phones [Kim Zetter/Wired]

(Image: Peephole, Paul Downey, CC-BY)