Hack-for-hire group caught targeting Android devices and iCloud backups
Security researchers say they have identified a hack-for-hire group targeting journalists, activists, and government officials across the Middle East and North Africa. The hackers used phishing attacks to access targets’ iCloud backups and messaging accounts on Signal, and deployed Android spyware capable of taking over the targets’ devices. This hacking campaign highlights a growing trend of government agencies outsourcing their hacking operations to private hack-for-hire companies.
Mobile cybersecurity company Lookout also investigated these attacks. The three organizations collaborated with each other and published separate reports on Wednesday. According to Lookout, the attacks go beyond members of Egyptian and Lebanese civil society, and include targets in the Bahraini and Egyptian governments, as well as targets in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom, and potentially the United States or alumni of American universities. Lookout concluded that the hackers behind this espionage campaign work for a hack-for-hire vendor with connections to BITTER APT, a hacking group that cybersecurity companies suspect has ties to the Indian government.
Rebsec could not be reached for comment, as the company has deleted its social media accounts and website.
” While groups like BITTER may not have the most advanced hacking and spy tools, their tactics can still be highly effective. In the attacks part of this campaign, the hackers used several different techniques.
When targeting Android users, the hackers used a spyware called ProSpy, masquerading as popular messaging and communications apps like Signal, WhatsApp, and Zoom, as well as ToTok and Botim, two apps that are popular in the Middle East. In some cases, the hackers tried to trick victims into registering and adding a new device — controlled by the hackers — to their Signal account, a technique that has been popular among various hacking groups, including Russian spies. A spokesperson for the Indian embassy in Washington, D. did not immediately respond to a request for comment
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