Meta Flags Malicious Android, iOS Apps Affecting 1M Facebook Users
Some 400 mobile apps have posed as legitimate software on Google Play and the Apple App Store over the past year, and were designed to steal Facebook user credentials.
App Store security coverage examines malicious apps, supply-chain risks, privacy issues, and vulnerabilities affecting mobile users and developers.
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Background for this topic.
App stores are centralized digital platforms that distribute software applications for devices such as smartphones and computers. They typically enforce a review process to detect malicious code, policy violations, or privacy issues before apps become publicly available. Users depend on app stores to obtain authentic and updated software from trusted sources.
From a security perspective, app stores present attack surfaces including malicious apps that bypass review, compromised developer accounts used to push harmful updates, and supply chain risks through third-party libraries embedded in apps. Security teams should monitor app store submissions for emerging threats, track vulnerabilities in popular apps, and collaborate with platform operators to remove or mitigate risky applications promptly.
Some 400 mobile apps have posed as legitimate software on Google Play and the Apple App Store over the past year, and were designed to steal Facebook user credentials.
Meta Platforms on Friday disclosed that it had identified over 400 malicious apps on Android and iOS that it said targeted online users with the goal of stealing their Facebook login information