Spyware Designed for Telegram Mods Also Targets WhatsApp Add-Ons
Researchers discovered spyware designed to steal from Android devices and from Telegram mods can also reach WhatsApp users.
Spyware coverage examines reported incidents, technical analysis, infrastructure, disruption efforts, and defensive guidance on unauthorized monitoring.
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Background for this topic.
Spyware is malicious software that covertly monitors a device or user and sends collected information to an unauthorized party. Depending on its capabilities, it may capture keystrokes, credentials, messages, files, browsing activity, or location data, and may use microphones or cameras when permissions or vulnerabilities allow it. The term covers both broadly distributed malware and more specialized surveillance tools, so reporting should identify a family or tool only when evidence supports it.
Spyware commonly reaches systems through deceptive applications, malicious attachments, bundled software, or exploitation of unpatched software; the relevant exposure depends on the reported case. Security teams should prioritize timely vulnerability and application updates, restrict installation and permissions, and use endpoint or mobile telemetry to detect unusual collection or outbound connections. Suspected infections require isolation and evidence preservation, followed by credential rotation from a trusted device and assessment of what privacy-sensitive data may have been accessed. These findings can also inform legal or regulatory handling where monitoring involved personal or confidential information.
Researchers discovered spyware designed to steal from Android devices and from Telegram mods can also reach WhatsApp users.
Cybersecurity researchers have unearthed a number of WhatsApp mods for Android that come fitted with a spyware module dubbed CanesSpy
Nobody knows which state, but India’s government never quite shrugged off claims it uses spyware Indian politicians and media figures have reported that Apple has warned them their accounts may be under attack by state-sponsored actors.…
The threat actor known as Arid Viper (aka APT-C-23, Desert Falcon, or TAG-63) has been attributed as behind an Android spyware campaign targeting Arabic-speaking users with a counterfeit dating app designed to harvest data from infected handsets