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Hackers Target Israeli Rocket Alert App Users with Spyware

By Waqas If you’ve downloaded a rocket alert app from a third-party source, ensure it’s spyware-free and delete it from your device. This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: Hackers Target Israeli Rocket Alert App Users with Spyware

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While the identity of the culprits behind this spyware campaign remains uncertain, their tactics closely resemble those used by pro-Palestinian hackers, such as AnonGhost.

On October 9th, 2023, Hackread.com reported on the infiltration by pro-Palestinian hackers associated with AnonGhost into the Red Alert app, an Israeli application designed by Kobi Snir exclusively for delivering missile and rocket alerts to the Israeli population. Seizing this opportunity, AnonGhost maliciously disseminated fabricated rocket, missile, and even nuclear bomb alerts to Israelis.

Now, Cloudflare’s Cloudforce One Threat Operations Team has uncovered a similar incident, this time targeting a different rocket alert app. The researchers identified a malicious website (redalertsme) hosting a Google Android Application (APK) impersonating the legitimate RedAlert – Rocket Alerts application originally created by Elad Nava. The motive behind this malicious website was to infect unsuspecting Israeli app users with spyware.

Rocket alert apps have gained immense popularity in Israel, providing crucial alerts to citizens about incoming air strikes, which have sadly become an all too common occurrence. The misuse of these applications, as witnessed in the recent hack, has the potential to create widespread panic and further escalate an already tense situation.

According to a blog post by Cloudflare, the malicious domain in question offered both iOS and Android versions of the mobile application. However, while the link for the iOS version directed users to the legitimate App Store page, the Android version was a manipulated variant.

Screenshot of the malicious website (Cloudflare)

The malicious application, while retaining elements of the original code, had been equipped with the capability to collect sensitive user data. This included access to contacts, call logs, text messages, account information, SIM card details, and a list of installed applications on the victim’s device.

To make matters worse, the malicious app operated stealthily in the background, continuously harvesting data from the compromised device. The stolen information was then sent to a remote server.

Although the data was encrypted, the use of RSA encryption with a bundled public key within the app made it theoretically possible for anyone intercepting the data packets to decrypt the information.

The website hosting the spyware-infested version of RedAlert has since been taken down. However, users who may have unwittingly installed this malicious application remain at risk. They are advised to take immediate action to cleanse their devices of the spyware.

To determine whether their devices have been compromised, users are urged to check the permissions that the app has requested. Suspicious permissions include access to call logs, contacts, phone features, and SMS capabilities. These indicators should be taken seriously to ensure the security of their devices and personal information.

While malicious AI chatbots like WormGPT and FraudGPT assist malicious actors in generating novel ideas with user-friendly technology, traditional cyber warfare tactics, such as hackvisits, persist. Presently, both pro-Palestinian and Israeli hackvisits are focusing on each other’s critical ICS products.

As hackers continuously innovate, it is crucial for users to remain vigilant and informed about safeguarding themselves from the ever-evolving landscape of cyber threats.

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