Thursday, April 3, 2025
HomeAdware50 Malicious Android Apps Bypassed Google Play Protection and Infected 30 Million...

50 Malicious Android Apps Bypassed Google Play Protection and Infected 30 Million Android Users

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

More than 50 malicious apps with more than 30 Million installations found on Google play, that display annoying ads and in some cases, it convinces the user to install other apps.

According to Avast, all the malicious apps are linked together using the third party Android libraries to bypasses background restrictions with the newer versions of Android.

These libraries referred to as “TsSdk” and it displays the more and more annoying ads which are against Play Store policy.

Avast research found that the malicious apps were installed more than 30 million times from Google Play before it was removed.

50 Malicious Apps on Google Play

Two versions of adware spotted, the version A installed more than 3.6 million times. The adware included in following apps simple games, fitness, and photo editing apps.

These apps found mostly installed in India, Indonesia, Philippines, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal.

“Version A is not very well obfuscated and the adware SDK is easy to spot in the code. It is also the less prevalent of the two versions. Some variants of version A also contain code that downloads further applications, prompting the user to install them, ” reads Avast blog post.

version B of TsSdk installed nearly 28 million times, the adware includes fitness and music apps. These apps often downloaded in Philippines, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Brazil, Nepal, and Great Britain.

Once installed it shows ads within the first hour of the installation and then at frequent intervals. For the first four hours, it shows full-screen ads and then randomly like 15 minutes, 30 minutes and 45 minutes once.

Version B doesn’t seem to work on Android version 8.0(Oreo), due to recent changes in background service management. Full list of the malicious app can be found here.

Common Defences and Mitigations

  • Give careful consideration to the permission asked for by applications.
  • Download applications from trusted sources.
  • Stay up with the latest version.
  • Encrypt your devices.
  • Make frequent backups of important data.
  • Install anti-malware on their devices.
  • Stay strict with CIA Cycle.

You can follow us on LinkedinTwitterFacebook for daily Cybersecurity updates also you can take the Best Cybersecurity courses online to keep your self-updated.

Also Read:

Hackers Deliver Banking Malware Through Password Protected ZIP File

Organized Cybercrime – Hacker Groups Work Together To Distribute Banking Malware Globally

Fileless Banking Malware Steals User Credentials, Outlook Contacts, and Installs Hacking Tool

Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

Hackers Selling SnowDog RAT Malware With Remote Control Capabilities Online

A sophisticated remote access trojan (RAT) dubbed SnowDog has surfaced on underground cybercrime forums, prompting alarms...

Authorities Shut Down Kidflix Child Abuse Platform in Major Takedown

In one of the most significant operations against child sexual exploitation in recent history,...

Massive GitHub Leak: 39M API Keys & Credentials Exposed – How to Strengthen Security

Over 39 million API keys, credentials, and other sensitive secrets were exposed on GitHub...

GoResolver: A Powerful New Tool for Analyzing Golang Malware

Analyzing malware has become increasingly challenging, especially with the growing popularity of programming languages...

Supply Chain Attack Prevention

Free Webinar - Supply Chain Attack Prevention

Recent attacks like Polyfill[.]io show how compromised third-party components become backdoors for hackers. PCI DSS 4.0’s Requirement 6.4.3 mandates stricter browser script controls, while Requirement 12.8 focuses on securing third-party providers.

Join Vivekanand Gopalan (VP of Products – Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing – Indusface) as they break down these compliance requirements and share strategies to protect your applications from supply chain attacks.

Discussion points

Meeting PCI DSS 4.0 mandates.
Blocking malicious components and unauthorized JavaScript execution.
PIdentifying attack surfaces from third-party dependencies.
Preventing man-in-the-browser attacks with proactive monitoring.

More like this

Hackers Selling SnowDog RAT Malware With Remote Control Capabilities Online

A sophisticated remote access trojan (RAT) dubbed SnowDog has surfaced on underground cybercrime forums, prompting alarms...

Authorities Shut Down Kidflix Child Abuse Platform in Major Takedown

In one of the most significant operations against child sexual exploitation in recent history,...

Massive GitHub Leak: 39M API Keys & Credentials Exposed – How to Strengthen Security

Over 39 million API keys, credentials, and other sensitive secrets were exposed on GitHub...