Computing

How a Web Link Can Take Control of Your Phone

If Android users click the wrong link, an attacker could intercept phone calls and track their location.

  • Wednesday, February 29, 2012
  • By Tom Simonite

A chilling demonstration to a small, packed room at the RSA security conference today showed how clicking a single bad Web link while using a phone running Google's Android operating system could give an attacker full remote control of your phone. Once George Kurtz and colleagues from security startup CrowdStrike were done, they could record phone calls, intercept text messages, and track the hacked phone's location at all times.

"What is ubiquitous, has a camera, a microphone, knows where you are at all times, is always on, and stores your sensitive information?" asked Kurtz. "The smart phone is the ultimate spying tool."

Smart phones have been hacked before, but Kurtz said this was the first public demonstration of an end-to-end system able to wrest control of one remotely with just a single click on a Web link.

Targeted attacks, designed to steal intellectual property or valuable information from corporations and their executives, have become relatively common in recent years. For some time, security experts have warned that mobile devices offer a way that such attacks could become more pervasive and effective, and today's demo lends weight to that case.

Kurtz and colleagues played out a scenario on stage that involved hacking a real, unmodified Android phone. Kurtz, playing the role of a busy investor at an industry event, received a text message claiming to be from his mobile carrier asking him to download an update to his phone's software. When he clicked the link in that message, the phone's browser crashed and the device rebooted. Once restarted, the device appeared unchanged, but a silent, malicious app had been installed that relayed all his phone calls and text messages to the attacker, who could also track his location on a map.

The attack was staged on a device running the 2.2 version of Google's Android operating system, also known as Frozen Yogurt, but it made use of bugs in a component of Android's browser that are also present in the more recent 2.3, or Gingerbread, version. Those two versions of Android account for almost 90 percent of Android devices in use today, said Kurtz. More significantly, WebKit, the browser component that was exploited, is also at the core of the Web browsers found in Apple's iPhone and iPad devices, BlackBerry phones, and Google's TV devices.

Related Articles

Bungling Cyber Spy Stalks Iran

Government departments, banks, and companies that operate critical infrastructure have fallen victim to badly crafted malware known as Mahdi.

Mobile Payment Chips Could Let Hackers into Your Phone

Near-field communication chips may let smartphones replace cash and credit cards—but they could also offer opportunities to hackers.

An App to Stop Tracking

New software lets Android users see how apps are collecting their data, and restrict the behavior.

To comment, please sign in or register

Forgot my password

Advertisement

Special Reports

Innovators Under 35: India

2012 India TR35

The INDIA TR35 list recognizes outstanding innovators under the age of 35 for their continuing work in India that has the highest impact locally and globally. We highlight innovators in India whose work--spanning medicine, computing, communications, electronics, nanotechnology, and more--is changing our world. See this year's list of winners.

View All Special Reports

Advertisement
Advertisement