Sunday, December 22, 2024
Homecyber securityThe U.S. Government Funded Smartphones Comes Pre-installed With Unremovable Malware

The U.S. Government Funded Smartphones Comes Pre-installed With Unremovable Malware

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Security researchers from Malwarebytes found pre-installed malware on UMX U683CL handsets. The phones are made under the Lifeline program to low-income consumers for Affordable Communications.

Multiple users reported to Malwarebytes that HiddenAds suddenly get installed on their UMX mobile phone, so the company purchased a UMX U683CL for further analysis.

Malware Comes Pre-Installed

The UMX U683CL phones offered by Assurance Wireless and it cost only $35 under the government-funded program.

- Advertisement - SIEM as a Service

Once the user logs into the device a questionable app named Wireless Update, starts auto-installing apps without user consent. It doesn’t notify users or request any permission to install apps, it just installs the apps on its own.

A malicious app detected as Android/PUP.Riskware.Autoins.Fota.fbcvd get’s installed during the update process. The Agent is heavily obfuscated and it is a vital part of the system. It is a variant of Adups malware.

UMX mobile

It is a malicious firmware that comes preinstalled on the devices and it has system-level rights, Malwarebytes able to confirm the firmware presence on the phones.

“It’s with great frustration that I must write about another unremovable pre-installed app found on the UMX U683CL phone: the mobile device’s own Settings app functions as a heavily-obfuscated malware we detect as Android/Trojan.Dropper.Agent.UMX.”

“The more discernible variant of this malware uses Chinese characters for variable names. Therefore, we can assume the origin of this malware is China.”

The Trojan agent downloads another piece of the malware known as HiddenAds. The malware strains display aggressive ads and it is hard for an end-user to find which app displaying the ads.

Malwarebytes informed Assurance Wireless about their findings of the devices with pre-installed, but Assurance Wireless didn’t respond.

To note the UMX mobile device is made by a Chinese company, it’s unclear who installed the malware as several companies involved in the device supply chain between device manufacturer to the buyer.

UMX mobile

There is no current solution, uninstalling the wireless Update may lead to missing out critical OS updates.

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

Threat Actors Selling Nunu Stealer On Hacker Forums

A new malware variant called Nunu Stealer is making headlines after being advertised on underground hacker...

Siemens UMC Vulnerability Allows Arbitrary Remote Code Execution

A critical vulnerability has been identified in Siemens' User Management Component (UMC), which could...

Foxit PDF Editor Vulnerabilities Allows Remote Code Execution

Foxit Software has issued critical security updates for its widely used PDF solutions, Foxit...

Windows 11 Privilege Escalation Vulnerability Lets Attackers Execute Code to Gain Access

Microsoft has swiftly addressed a critical security vulnerability affecting Windows 11 (version 23H2), which...

API Security Webinar

72 Hours to Audit-Ready API Security

APIs present a unique challenge in this landscape, as risk assessment and mitigation are often hindered by incomplete API inventories and insufficient documentation.

Join Vivek Gopalan, VP of Products at Indusface, in this insightful webinar as he unveils a practical framework for discovering, assessing, and addressing open API vulnerabilities within just 72 hours.

Discussion points

API Discovery: Techniques to identify and map your public APIs comprehensively.
Vulnerability Scanning: Best practices for API vulnerability analysis and penetration testing.
Clean Reporting: Steps to generate a clean, audit-ready vulnerability report within 72 hours.

More like this

Threat Actors Selling Nunu Stealer On Hacker Forums

A new malware variant called Nunu Stealer is making headlines after being advertised on underground hacker...

Beware Of Malicious SharePoint Notifications That Delivers Xloader Malware

Through the use of XLoader and impersonating SharePoint notifications, researchers were able to identify...

Malicious Supply Chain Attacking Moving From npm Community To VSCode Marketplace

Researchers have identified a rise in malicious activity on the VSCode Marketplace, highlighting the...