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Date:07/12/16

158% increase in Android platform vulnerabilities

A new Quick Heal report reveals an increase in vulnerabilities on the Android platform, as well as a 33 percent rise in mobile ransomware. Researchers also found a slight decrease in Potentially Unwanted Applications (PUA) and adware, dropping by three percent and 12 percent respectively.
 
Significant report findings:
 
Compared to Q2, there was a 14 percent increase in the detection count of malware on Windows-based computers.
 
Total malware detection throughout Q3 2016 numbered well over three million, pointing to still unresolved security issues in the Windows operating system. The Android platform also continues to show extreme vulnerability with malware detection growing 158 percent in Q3.
 
Mobile ransomware rose 33 percent in Q3, as compared to Q2 of 2016.
 
Detection of mobile banking Trojans has also increased steadily, rising 25 percent in Q3 as compared to Q2 of 2016.
 
Overall, when compared to 2015, 2016 has seen a 76 percent increase in mobile banking Trojans.
 
Adware
 
Attackers have broadened their scope of attacks with the help of adware. Strategies are changing from showing only ads to stealing information and developing destructive capabilities, such as ransomware infections.
 
Attackers may hook Adware or Potentially Unwanted Programs (PUPs) into running genuine processes, making it difficult for installed security software to trace their presence in the infected system.
 
Rise in Android vulnerabilities
 
Given the explosive rate at which security vulnerabilities are being detected on Android devices, attackers are going to ramp up their attacks on Android users.
 
Moreover, as smartphones continue to replace desktops and laptops as portable “data banks,” hackers will continue to use them as easy targets.
 
Ransomware
 
Ransomware variants will grow, and advanced variants of families such as Locky / Zepto will be a challenge for security products. Locky / Zepto ransomware will continue to be embedded in PDFs and other formats for wider dissemination. Ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) attacks may increase due to “user friendliness” and availability. CrypMIC is another ransomware family that is expected to hit its targets with new variants and sophisticated propagation techniques.
 
In 2017, new ransomware attacks are expected to rise because CrypMIC has proven to be highly robust and the most profitable malware of its kind so far.
 
Payment system and banking malware threats will rise
 
Quick Heal’s Q1 threat report predicted a rise in the detection of banking malware, which has come to fruition. While banks embrace the mobile domain to simplify banking for their customers, this may be a risky strategy. Cyber criminals are taking advantage of this trend, and of organizations and consumers who are not taking their digital security seriously.
 
“The findings in our most recent report are not surprising in the least,” said Sanjay Katkar, Managing Director and Chief Technology Officer of Quick Heal. “As predicted, bad actors are continuing to take advantage of Android and Windows users and the businesses, especially financial organizations, that depend on these platforms to support daily business processes. Cyber criminals are banking on inevitable complacency and will take advantage of lapses in security protections.”




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