Google Play Offered Fewer Blacklisted Mobile Apps in Q3

Third-party AndroidAPKDescargar store carried the most blacklisted mobile apps.

Dawn Kawamoto, Former Associate Editor, Dark Reading

December 13, 2017

2 Min Read

Blacklisted mobile apps are on the rise in app stores: a new report shows a 35% increase in the third quarter across 14 different online stores.

According to new data from RiskIQ, blacklisted mobile apps totaled 51,188 in the third quarter.

Mobile apps are submitted to and analyzed by anti-virus vendors when suspected of malicious behavior, says Mike Wyatt, RiskIQ's product operations director. If such activity is detected, anti-virus vendors will block, or blacklist, the apps from downloading and running on a user's device. Every blacklisted app that slips past an app store's vetting process could potentially cause malicious harm to a user's device or data.  

AndroidAPKDescargar, which offers Spanish-language mobile apps, fueled the third quarter jump with 20,907 blacklisted mobile apps – more than double its 9,285 in the prior quarter, the report notes.

Google Play, meanwhile, had fewer blacklisted mobile apps: 8,125 in Q3, down from 8,657 in the previous quarter, according to the report.

But more importantly, notes Wyatt, Google cut the percentage of blacklisted apps in Google Play to 4% of its total 204,981 apps in the third quarter – down from 8% in the previous quarter. "The percentage is a more important figure ... since it indicates how likely the risk is," Wyatt says.

Google Play and Apple's App Store are considered the go-to place for apps by security experts, because both companies vet the apps in their stores. Nonetheless, malware-laden apps have been found in both stores. Android/TrojanDropper.Agent.BKY, for example, was discovered in Google Play.

Although the percentage and total number of blacklisted apps declined in the third quarter, Wyatt notes it is too early to say whether Google Play has improved its security.

"The Google team works hard to ensure bad apps stay out of their store, so they were able to decrease the number in the third quarter. However, we do not see a consistent downward trend, so it remains to be seen if this number will drop again in the fourth quarter," he says.

AndroidAPKDescargar, meanwhile, did not do so well. Nearly a third of its 68,421 apps in the third quarter were blacklisted apps, a similar slice as its second quarter, the report notes. Mobile game app store 9Game.com had the highest penetration of blacklisted apps on its site in the third quarter, 97% of 5,859 apps.

Wyatt advises CISOs and security teams to educate their BYOD workers to use the official app stores and implement tighter security controls for the devices to reduce introducing a security risk.

BYOD and corporate mobile device users should also be advised to be wary of granting apps extensive permissions and also be leery of downloading apps from pages where there are misspellings on the page, says Wyatt.

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About the Author(s)

Dawn Kawamoto

Former Associate Editor, Dark Reading

Dawn Kawamoto was formerly a Associate Editor for Dark Reading, where she covered cybersecurity news and trends. She is an award-winning journalist who has written and edited technology, management, leadership, career, finance, and innovation stories for such publications as CNET's News.com, TheStreet.com, AOL's DailyFinance, and The Motley Fool. More recently, she served as associate editor for technology careers site Dice.com.

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