GuardZoo Android Malware Attacking military personnel via WhatsApp To Steal Sensitive Data

A Houthi-aligned group has been deploying Android surveillanceware called GuardZoo since October 2019 to target military personnel in the Middle East by leveraging social engineering tactics and using military-themed lures to trick victims into downloading the malware. 

Based on a preexisting RAT (Remote Access Trojan) called Dendroid, GuardZoo grants attackers remote control over the infected device, allowing for data exfiltration and potentially additional malware installations. 

The campaign remains active and has targeted users in Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Oman, as Google has confirmed that no GuardZoo-infected apps are currently available on Google Play. 

List of GuardZoo samples with dates and titles.

GuardZoo, a derivative of the leaked Dendroid RAT, utilizes a custom C2 backend built with ASP.NET instead of the original’s PHP web panel.

Are you from SOC/DFIR Teams? - Sign up for a free ANY.RUN account! to Analyse Advanced Malware Files

It communicates with its C2 server through its primary address, https://wwwgoogl.zapto[.]org and a backup at https://somrasdc.ddns[.]net. GuardZoo boasts over 60 commands, most exclusive to it and presumably added by the attacker, for various malicious tasks.  

List of C2 commands and functions.

An app can download and load external DEX files from a C2 server instead of requiring a full APK update, which is downloaded from “<C2 Address>/updateApp?dexfile=classes.dex” and placed in the app’s data directory’s “dex” folder. 

The app then restarts to load the new DEX file. While this secondary payload delivery method is deprecated, the code for DEX loading is still present, potentially allowing the app to revert to this method in the future. 

GuardZoo can download and dynamically load external DEX files.

GuardZoo, a Yemeni malware, utilizes dynamic DNS domains registered to YemenNet for C2 communication by employing self-signed certificates and using the ASP.NET backend on IIS 10. 

Upon infecting a device, GuardZoo establishes connection and retrieves initial commands: uploading specific geolocation files (KMZ, WPT, RTE, TRK) created after a set date, setting a 15-minute retry window on errors, disabling local logging, and uploading file metadata.

Communication is over HTTPS, but the request body is unencrypted. 

GuardZoo can upload the list of files to the device.

GuardZoo, a malware family, has been targeting devices in the Middle East since at least December 2022 by luring users with various themes, including military, religious, and ebooks, to trick users into installing it. 

The initial infection vectors are WhatsApp, WhatsApp Business, and browser downloads.

Unsecured C2 server logs reveal that victims are mostly located in Yemen, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt, with a smaller number in Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, and Qatar.

The logs also contain IP addresses and mobile carrier details of the victim devices. 

According to C2 server logs, victim IPs are scattered around Middle Eastern countries.

Analysis of the C2 server by Lookout revealed its purchase on March 18th, 2019, from a distributor in the United Arab Emirates, likely serving Yemen.

The codebase itself was primarily English, but the user interface and messages indicated Modern Standard Arabic usage. 

The timezone was set to “Asia/Baghdad” (GMT+3) and the project was named “Project 500” locally, while log entries suggested the targets were Pro-Hadi forces, Yemen’s internationally recognized government, further corroborated by an exfiltrated document referencing the Yemeni Ministry of Defense.

“Is Your System Under Attack? Try Cynet XDR: Automated Detection & Response for Endpoints, Networks, & Users!”- Free Demo

Aman Mishra

Aman Mishra is a Security and privacy Reporter covering various data breach, cyber crime, malware, & vulnerability.

Recent Posts

INE Security Alert: Expediting CMMC 2.0 Compliance

INE Security, a leading global provider of cybersecurity training and certifications, today announced a new…

13 hours ago

Subaru’s STARLINK Connected Car’s Vulnerability Let Attackers Gain Restricted Access

In a groundbreaking discovery on November 20, 2024, cybersecurity researchers Shubham Shah and a colleague…

3 days ago

Android Kiosk Tablets Vulnerability Let Attackers Control AC & Lights

A security flaw found in Android-based kiosk tablets at luxury hotels has exposed a grave…

3 days ago

CISA Releases Six ICS Advisories Details Security Issues

The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) issued six Industrial Control Systems (ICS) advisories…

3 days ago

Juniper Routers Exploited via Magic Packet Vulnerability to Deploy Custom Backdoor

A sophisticated cyber campaign dubbed "J-magic" has been discovered targeting enterprise-grade Juniper routers with a…

3 days ago

Beware of Fake Captcha Verifications Spreading Lumma Malware

In January, Netskope Threat Labs uncovered a sophisticated global malware campaign leveraging fake CAPTCHA pages…

3 days ago