SharkBot Malware Resurfaces on Google Play to Steal Users' Credentials
It reportedly targets the banking credentials of Android users via apps with 60,000 installations
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Background for this topic.
Google Play is Google’s official distribution platform for Android applications and games. It also provides related controls, including app review, developer signing and release mechanisms, and Google Play Protect, which checks applications for known or suspected harmful behavior before and after installation. Its security role concerns the apps and updates delivered through the store, not the security of every Android device or application.
Security practitioners monitor Google Play because malicious, deceptive, repackaged, or vulnerable applications can reach users through legitimate-looking listings and request excessive permissions or collect sensitive data. Store review and automated scanning reduce exposure but do not guarantee that an app is safe; newly discovered vulnerabilities, compromised developer accounts, and harmful updates remain relevant attack surfaces. Defenders should assess an application’s provenance, permissions, requested data, update history, and vendor security response, while using Play Protect and device-management controls where appropriate. Google Play vulnerability and policy advisories can therefore inform application allowlisting, remediation, privacy reviews, and removal decisions.
It reportedly targets the banking credentials of Android users via apps with 60,000 installations
The notorious Android banking trojan known as SharkBot has once again made an appearance on the Google Play Store by masquerading as antivirus and cleaner apps
A new and upgraded version of the SharkBot malware has returned to Google's Play Store, targeting banking logins of Android users through apps that have tens of thousands of installations. [...]