Beware of trojan malware attack, MeitY warns customers of 27 major banks

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Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology’s Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) on Tuesday notified that customers of nearly 27 Indian banks including major public and private banks are at the risk of attack from a new banking trojan malware masquerading as income-tax refund related link.

Modus operandi

The victims first receive an SMS link to a phishing website, disguised as the Income Tax Department website, they are then asked to fill in a few personal details before being sent a malicious APK file to be downloaded to complete verification. On opening the app, the victim is asked to grant permissions to access SMS, call logs and contacts.

If the victim doesn’t allow permission to any of these, the same form appears on opening the app asking for data including full name, PAN, Aadhar number, address, date of birth, mobile number, email address and financial details like account number, IFS code, CIF number, debit card number, expiry date, CVV and PIN, the federal cybersecurity agency noted.

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Once these details are entered, the application states that there is a refund amount that could be transferred to the user’s bank account.

“When the user enters the amount and clicks ‘Transfer’, the application shows an error and demonstrates a fake update screen. While the screen for installing the update is shown, Trojan in the backend sends the user’s details including SMS and call logs to the attacker’s machine,” CERT-In said.

“These details are then used by the attacker to generate the bank specific mobile banking screen and render it on the user’s device. The user is then requested to enter the mobile banking credentials which are captured by the attacker,” it added.

These attacks are likely to jeopardise the privacy and security of sensitive data ultimately resulting in large scale attacks and financial frauds.

Drinik suspected

Claimed to be done using Drinik malware, the earlier version of this malware came in 2016 as a primitive SMS stealer and has recently evolved into a banking trojan demonstrating a phishing screen persuading users to enter sensitive banking information.

“Such trojans have become very common lately. But something like Drinik which has been dormant since 2016 can be tracked easily even using a Google Play Protect. Personally, I haven’t come across any strong active version of this malware recently. Also, consumers need to be wary that any legitimate government website will use ‘.gov.in’ in the link, anything else is not allowed in India for government websites,” Sunny Nehra, Admin, Hacks and Security told BusinessLine.

“These days people blindly give permissions to random apps to access personal data on phones without even thinking if that app really needs access to say your camera, gallery, phone book and so on. It’s good that MeitY is spreading awareness and updating users about such threats,” he added.

Kapil Gupta, Co-founder, Volon Cyber Security said,“Along with Drinik, another new Android malware ‘Elibomi’ has also been targeting taxpayers, luring them by offering tax filing service in a similar way. This malware too is getting delivered by SMS text phishing attack, pretending to come from income tax department. Users are recommended to not click on any unverifiable links from text messages. They should use reliable security application in mobile to protect against malicious applications”

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Digital lending: Government blocks 27 fraud lending apps offering instant credit online

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India’s digital lending value had jumped from $33 billion in FY15 to $150 billion in FY20 and is likely to grow to the $350-billion mark by FY23.

Following the ban on over 250 apps of Chinese origin ranging across categories such as social network, gaming, e-commerce, news, business, photo and video editing, and more, the government of India has now come down heavily on lending or loan apps offering instant credit over the internet. The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) had received a request from the Ministry of Home Affairs for blocking 27 loan lending apps and after due process, MeitY blocked those 27 apps under Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000. The information was shared by MoS Finance Ministry Anurag Singh Thakur in the Lok Sabha earlier this week. However, the names of the blocked loan apps weren’t shared in his reply. The information was shared by the MoS in response to a question on whether the government, large technology companies, and regulated digital lenders are jointly looking for a crackdown on fraud Chinese lending apps operating in India.

The Reserve Bank of India in a circular dated June 24, 2020, reiterated to banks and NBFCs to disclose names of digital lending platforms engaged as agents on the website while lending platforms were required to disclose upfront the name of the lending institution on whose behalf they are lending. Further, a press release was also issued on December 23, 2020, cautioning people against unauthorised digital lending platforms with an appeal to verify the antecedents of the service provider. The central bank had also constituted a Working Group on January 13, 2021, to study all aspects of digital lending activities including lending through online platforms and mobile apps by RBI regulated and unregulated entities. The group had to also come out with recommendations pertaining to regulatory and customer protection measures.

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In December 2020, Hyderabad police had arrested 11 persons from Delhi, Gurgaon while the Cyberabad police arrested six others in Hyderabad in instant mobile app loan fraud. Likewise, in January this year, Telangana police had arrested a Chinese national HE Jian alias Mark, a native of Jiangxi in China in connection with a probe into the instant online loan apps case. India’s digital lending market has seen significant growth over the years.

Moreover, from December 2020 till January 20, 2021, Google had also removed around 100 money lending apps that were “possibly not in compliance with the applicable legal and regulatory framework.” The information was shared by the Minister of State for Electronics and IT Sanjay Dhotre said in a written reply to the Lok Sabha in February. The digital lending value had jumped from $33 billion in FY15 to $150 billion in FY20 and is likely to grow to the $350-billion mark by FY23, according to Statista. Among the leading players in the market include Capital Float, Zest Money, Indifi, KredX, BharatPe, Lendingkart, Paisabazaar, and more. The digital lending value had jumped from $33 billion in FY15 to $150 billion in FY20 and is likely to grow to the $350-billion mark by FY23, according to Statista. Among the leading players in the market include Capital Float, Zest Money, Indifi, KredX, BharatPe, Lendingkart, Paisabazaar, and more.

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