ESET has discovered the first Android ransomware that doesn't just lock screens, but encrypts files.

Sara Peters, Senior Editor

June 5, 2014

3 Min Read

While all earlier ransomware for Android devices had worked by locking a device's screen, this weekend researchers at ESET spotted Simplocker, a new piece of Android malware that holds individual files for ransom by encrypting them. The researchers believe that the version they've seen is just a work in progress, because, although some of the attack techniques are rather sophisticated, the encryption itself is not.

"It's quite contradictory," says Robert Lipovsky, security intelligence team lead at ESET.

Simplocker scans the device's SD card for a wide variety of documents (including images, photos, PDFs, and Word docs). It encrypts those files and then issues this ransom note (translated from Russian):

WARNING your phone is locked!
The device is locked for viewing and distribution child pornography , zoophilia and other perversions.
To unlock you need to pay 260 UAH.
1. Locate the nearest payment kiosk.
2. Select MoneXy.
3. Enter [REDACTED].
4. Make deposit of 260 Hryvnia, and then press pay.
Do not forget to take a receipt!
After payment your device will be unlocked within 24 hours.
In case of no PAYMENT YOU WILL LOSE ALL DATA ON your device!

On one hand, explains Lipovsky, Simplocker uses basic AES encryption, which is not very impressive alongside the double-encryption used by CryptoLocker. On the other hand, it uses a variety of techniques to protect the attacker's identity that Lipovsky says are relatively uncommon.

For example, the attack demands that payment be made via MoneXy, which is not as traceable as credit card activity.

Further, the command-and-control server is hosted on a TOR onion domain.

Simplocker also sends identifiable information about the device (model, operating system, manufacturer) back to the C&C server, but Lipovsky says that he has seen no evidence that would indicate the malware would export personally identifiable information about the user.

Being that the message is written in Russian and demands payment in Ukrainian currency, it is safe to assume that Simplocker is aimed at that region. Although recent research elsewhere has found that malware activity in this region spiked at the height of the geopolitical conflict between Russia and Ukraine, Lipovsky will not speculate upon whether or not Simplocker is at all politically motivated.

Although the ransom note states that the device has been locked because it was used to view or distribute "child pornography, zoophilia, and other perversions," Lipovsky would not categorize Simplocker as "police ransomware," exactly. The ransom does not actually claim to come from law enforcement or include any police force logos.

The ransom requested, 260 UAH, equals roughly US$21. Lipovsky does not have an estimate of how many people have paid the ransom thus far, but since the malware is "quite fresh," it is probably quite a small number.

Ransomware has been a hot topic lately. Two weeks ago, more than 90 people were arrested for their connection to the Blackshades remote access toolkit, which contains ransomware. Monday, the US Department of Justice announced a major international effort to disrupt the Gameover Zeus botnet, which is often used in tandem with the CryptoLocker ransomware. CryptoLocker is well known partly for its association with Gameover Zeus and partly because it encrypts files twice with two different encryption algorithms.

"CryptoLocker is quite sophisticated," says Lipovsky, "but it is still a bit overhyped."

Lipovsky says that ransomware wouldn't be as big a deal if people just kept better backups.

For more information about ransomware, listen to yesterday's episode of Dark Reading Radio, "Pay Up Or Never See Your Data Again: Ransomware Raises The Stakes," with DarkReading's executive editor Kelly Jackson-Higgins and Lance James, head of cyber intelligence at Deloitte & Touche.

About the Author(s)

Sara Peters

Senior Editor

Sara Peters is Senior Editor at Dark Reading and formerly the editor-in-chief of Enterprise Efficiency. Prior that she was senior editor for the Computer Security Institute, writing and speaking about virtualization, identity management, cybersecurity law, and a myriad of other topics. She authored the 2009 CSI Computer Crime and Security Survey and founded the CSI Working Group on Web Security Research Law -- a collaborative project that investigated the dichotomy between laws regulating software vulnerability disclosure and those regulating Web vulnerability disclosure.


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