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DEFENSOR ID a stealthy Android banking Trojan - Source Code

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DEFENSOR ID a stealthy Android banking Trojan - Source Code


☢️ Dissecting DEFENSOR: a stealthy Android banking malware

Android malware apps are nothing new, but this one is of particular interest in how it implements no such functionality that can be readily detected by security products. The apps named DEFENSOR ID and Defensor Digital rely mainly on Android's Accessibility Service to conduct malicious activities, and go undetected.

In fact, a blog post released May 22nd 2020 by malware researcher Lukas Stefanko of ESET states, "the banking trojan was available on Google Play at the time of the analysis. The app is fitted with standard information-stealing capabilities; however, this banker is exceptionally insidious in that after installation it requires a single action from the victim – enable Android’s Accessibility Service – to fully unleash the app’s malicious functionality."

The blog post also demonstrates at the time of its inception, no antivirus engine detected this malware sample.

Even today, only 5-6 detection engines are flagging these two apps, according to VirusTotal. This raises concern for the next iteration of malware that may be nothing but a slight modification of these apps.

Virus Total analysis of defensor malware apps

Android Accessibility Service

To make smartphones more accessible to users with special needs, the Accessibility Service allows for the device to extend permissions to an app to read screen content (e.g. for providing text to speech synthesis capability). You can imagine how useful would such a functionality be to a malicious app.

Existing detection models can reliably predict when certain combinations of permissions requested by an app may pose problems. But because the Defensor apps mainly relied on obtaining Accessibility Service permissions from the user, along with some other minimalistic ones, no red flags were raised anywhere. The permissions requested by the app include the following, of which the critical ones are highlighted:

  • android.permission.INTERNET
  • android.permission.SYSTEM_ALERT_WINDOW
  • android.permission.BIND_ACCESSIBILITY_SERVICE
  • com.secure.protect.world.permission.C2D_MESSAGE
  • android.permission.ACCESS_NETWORK_STATE
  • android.permission.FOREGROUND_SERVICE
  • android.permission.REQUEST_DELETE_PACKAGES
  • android.permission.SYSTEM_OVERLAY_WINDOW
  • android.permission.WAKE_LOCK
  • android.permission.WRITE_SETTINGS
  • com.google.android.c2dm.permission.RECEIVE

In practice, this means the app can capture credentials entered by the user on mobile banking apps, read or generate SMS messages, read emails, read Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) codes generated by authenticator apps — thereby bypassing 2FA, steal cryptocurrency private keys, and so on, and upload all of this vital information to an attacker-controlled server!

The app also requests the WAKE_LOCK permission, letting it override the default screen timeout setting, and keeping the device turned on persistently. This would give malware an extended opportunity to launch other apps and to continuously capturing sensitive information.

The screenshots provided by ESET demonstrate this behaviour:

Santander app credentials captured by DEFENSOR ID malware
DEFENSOR malware app reading emails

Indicators of Compromise (IOCs)

To make things easy for the security community, malware researchers at ESET have thankfully provided two useful IOCs identifying the malicious apps that have now been yanked from the Google Play store.

Package Name SHA-1 Hash SHA-256 Hash ESET detection name
com.secure.protect.world F17AEBC741957AA21CFE7C7D7BAEC0900E863F61 BBFB6DEDC01492CA3AC0C4F77343A22162518B306660E9CE958F2A6369FFAF13 Android/Spy.BanBra.A
com.brazil.android.free EA069A5C96DC1DB0715923EB68192FD325F3D3CE B5A64791728AA641838D2A478375F5D46F91C91B8DF0CDE34B21DDA2D4D7D8A1 Android/Spy.BanBra.A

New information and my analysis

ESET researchers have done a brilliant job of presenting their comprehensive analysis of these apps and their documented behaviour. Further to their report however, I'd like to add a bit of my own findings.

Command & Control (C&C) domains

The attacker controlled C&C domains are still up — well at least one of them, and that's problematic.

Domain IP address Task
empresasenegocios.online 132.148.42.16 Command & Control (C&C)
atendimentoempresarial.digital 184.168.221.46 Command & Control (C&C)

The URLs specifically used by the app to establish communication between the attacker-controlled server include:
https://empresasenegocios.online/remoteControl/
https://empresasenegocios.online/remoteControl/api/main/index/
http://atendimentoempresarial.digital/remoteControl/api/main/index
http://atendimentoempresarial.digital/remoteControl/

Interestingly, VirusTotal reports most antivirus engines are still not flagging these URLs, except for FortiNet which flags just one of the empresasenegocios.online URLs as phishing:

Alt Text

Alt Text

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Nevermind the fact, the empresasenegocios.online domain still has a fancy admin panel for the attackers to log into and glance over the juicy details of their victims 🍿:

Defensor malware C&C server admin backoffice

Here's also a preview of the API:
Alt Text

And the domain continues to be hosted on GoDaddy's shared hosting, with its beautiful cPanel and WebMail interfaces accessible:

empresasenegocios.online/cpanel:
Alt Text

empresasenegocios.online/webmail:
Alt Text

At least, atendimentoempresarial.digital domain has its GoDaddy parking page showing up for now. While that's no guarantee that the domain's malicious ownership or activities have ceased, so far there are no strong signs indicating ongoing activity either.

The WHOIS records of these domains didn't reveal anything particularly interesting other than Sãu Paulo, Brazil addresses and phone numbers, which could very likely be fakes, along with two email addresses belonging to the anonymous ProtonMail service: appdados@protonmail.com and notificador@protonmail.com.

The Takeaways

Enforcing BYOD policies

Because prominent antivirus engines are not detecting apps like these — even now, advice to "scan your mobile device" is futile.

SOC analysts and Security Ops professionals are strongly advised to enforce a corporate mobile device policy which restricts employee access to Google Play app store on their work devices.

Apps like these pose significant threats to an organization's secrets especially when an organization has a relaxed Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) policy, allowing for corporate email accounts to be accessible on an employee's personal mobile device (e.g. Gmail's Android app managing both personal and work accounts of a user would not be immune to attacks like these, and could easily infiltrate corporate trade secrets to malicious actors).

Network monitoring and blocks

Additionally, extensive network monitoring in your SIEM/EDR products should be setup for these servers, with network blocks implemented, given at least one of these domains is still active. That way, any device on your corporate network would be prevented from inadvertently making calls to these domains.

Note: The IP addresses appear to belong to GoDaddy's shared hosting, therefore blocking these could potentially block legitimate websites. It is best to block the malicious domains for the time being.

DEFENSOR ID and Defensor Digital were just two of the apps which have been identified and removed from the Play store, but given their stealthy behaviour, we do not know as of yet how many other apps might be using these servers or leveraging the Accessibility Service weakness.


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