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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday April 08 2020, @07:57PM   Printer-friendly
from the rooted-in-your-phone dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

An Android malware package likened to a Russian matryoshka nesting doll has security researchers raising the alarm, since it appears it's almost impossible to get rid of.

Known as xHelper, the malware has been spreading mainly in Russia, Europe, and Southwest Asia on Android 6 and 7 devices (which while old and out of date, make up around 15 per cent of the current user base) for the past year from unofficial app stores. Once on a gizmo, it opens a backdoor, allowing miscreants to spy on owners, steal their data, and cause mischief.

It has only recently been picked apart by Kaspersky Lab bods, and what makes the malware particularly nasty, the researchers say, is how it operates on multiple layers on the tablets and handsets it infects.

"The main feature of xHelper is entrenchment," explained Igor Golovin on Tuesday. "Once it gets into the phone, it somehow remains there even after the user deletes it and restores the factory settings."

[...] The best thing to do, though, is go a step further than a factory reset, and erase the flash memory completely, including the system partition, and put in a fresh clean copy. "If you have Recovery mode set up on your Android smartphone," said Golovin, "you can try to extract the libc.so file from the original firmware and replace the infected one with it, before removing all malware from the system partition. However, it’s simpler and more reliable to completely reflash the phone."

Even better advice is to avoid downloading any suspicious apps from the Google Play Store, just to be safe, and definitely don't use unauthorized third-party stores at all.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by anubi on Thursday April 09 2020, @03:07AM

    by anubi (2828) on Thursday April 09 2020, @03:07AM (#980486) Journal

    In my day, one had to physically remove the bios chips ( usually two of em...low and high byte ), erase them under ultraviolet light, confirm they were now blank, now program the new code with special hardware ( eprom programmer ), and reinstall.

    The absolute worst anyone could do was force me to wipe the drive and restore from backup... Which I did numerous times.

    I knew good and well the position Microsoft was putting us all in.

    I wasn't ranked high enough in the corporation to be taken seriously. They bought into it anyway. It is now far beyond my ability to keep it flying.

    --
    "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]
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