F-Secure: Android accounted for 99% of new mobile malware in Q1 2014

According to F-Secure’s Q1 2014 Mobile Threat Report, 99% of the new mobile malware threats that emerged in Q1 2014 targeted the Android operating system. Android accounted for 275 out of 277 new families F-Secure saw in this period, leaving one (1) new malware each for Symbian and iOS. In the case of iOS, Trojan:iPhoneOS/AdThief.A, only works on jailbroken iPhones. iPhone that have not been jailbroken are not affected, so, in effect, iOS really has zero (0) cases of new malware. As for Symbian… Aw, who cares? Nobody uses Symbian anymore. If you’re curious, see the second graphic below.

In Q1, F-Secure’s Mobile Security product users mostly reported encountering trojans that did some form of silent SMS-sending (mainly from the Fakeinst and SMSSend families).

This was an active quarter for mobile malware development, with a number of “firsts” reported for Android. There was Trojan:Android/Torsm.A, the first one to use Tor to hide its communications with its command and control server. The first Android bootkit, Trojan:Android/Oldboot.A, was reported, as well as a trojan that tries to turn the Android phone into a silent cryptocurrency miner (Trojan:Android/CoinMiner.A).

Then there is the Dendroid toolkit, which promises to make creating Android trojans as simple as clicking a few buttons – and apparently comes with a lifetime warranty, too. Much like virus construction kits and exploit kits did before for PC-based threats, Dendroid will make Android malware creation much more accessible to anyone without the technical skills to do it themselves.

And this is all just in the first three months of 2014.

Moral of the story: Don’t settle for half-assed fakes, get a real iPhone.

F-Secure Android Malware

F-Secure

More info via F-Secure (pdf) here.

Related articles:
Google’s Sundar Pichai: Android not designed to be safe; if I wrote malware, I’d target Android, too – February 27, 2014
Cisco: Android the target of 99 percent of world’s mobile malware – January 17, 2014
U.S. DHS, FBI warn of malware threats to Android mobile devices – August 27, 2013
Android app malware rates skyrocket 40 percent in last quarter – August 7, 2013
First malware found in wild that exploits Android app signing flaw – July 25, 2013
Mobile Threats Report: Android accounts for 92% of all mobile malware – June 26, 2013
Latest self-replicating Android Trojan looks and acts just like Windows malware – June 7, 2013
99.9% of new mobile malware targets Android phones – May 30, 2013
Mobile malware exploding, but only for Android – May 14, 2013
Mobile malware: Android is a bad apple – April 15, 2013
F-Secure: Android accounted for 96% of all mobile malware in Q4 2012 – March 7, 2013
New malware attacks Android phones, Windows PCs to eavesdrop, steal data; iPhone, Mac users unaffected – February 4, 2013
FBI issues warning over Android malware attacks – October 15, 2012
Researchers discover serious flaw in Android app security, say HTC and Samsung ignore issue – September 28, 2012
Apple’s iPhone has passed a key security threshold – August 13, 2012
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Symantec: Apple iOS offers ‘full protection,’ Google Android ‘little protection’ vs. malware attacks – June 29, 2011
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Google forced to pull several malware-infested apps from Android market – June 8, 2011
Android malware sees explosive growth; even faster than with PCs – April 27, 2011
Virus-laden apps infest Google’s ‘open’ Android platform; iPhone unaffected – March 3, 2011
Security firm warns of new Android trojan that can steal personal information; iPhone unaffected – December 30, 2010
Trojan infects Android smartphones; iPhone unaffected – August 10, 2010
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Unlike proactive Apple, reactive Google doesn’t block malware from Android app store – June 4, 2010
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22 Comments

      1. Samsung knows the next iPhone is gonna swipe some major marketshare from them…

        Not to mention, the other Androids are finally catching up to Samsung in marketing… that… really is the only difference.

        It would be interesting if another Android maker had the guts to reveal all the dirty stuff Samsung is known for… and use that in their ads.

        In any case, unlike Samsung (that flooded the market), Apple’s constant rise in profits and newcomers to the platforms is all they need. Profitshare > Marketshare

        1. Samsung is more worried about Huawei. IDC reported that the overall mobile market grew 28.6% for the 1st quarter year-over-year. Huawei grew at 47.3%, Apple grew at 16.8%. I know that nobody here believes that market share matters, but I don’t know anyone who worked at Apple who wouldn’t have traded the Mac market share for the Windows market share. Market share excites investors every bit as much, probably more, than short-term financial stock manipulation games that Apple has now decided to play.

          http://www.macrumors.com/2014/04/30/idc-phones-1q14/

      1. The fact that there are threats to jailbroken iPhones (and have been since early on) destroys the nonsense, but incessantly repeated, myth of “Macs don’t get viruses because they have a smaller market share”.

    1. Interesting how these reports tend to gloss over that most Android users that usually settle for the ‘cheaper’ phones tend not to know enough to remove the default setting that allows access to ONLY the Google Play store. As such those users will not see even 0.5% of reported malware as reported in a prior F-Secure article. With greater freedom comes greater responsibility.

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