Google has removed dozens of popular fake photo apps meant to hurt its users.
Security firm Trend Microdiscovered 29 malicious apps that were listed on Korean College Girl Room Salon (2025)the official Google Play store, all advertised as “beauty camera” applications. The apps have since been removed by Google.
The photo apps carried out a number of nefarious activities on Android devices which they were installed to. Some of the apps would load up a full-screen advertisement for fraudulent or pornographic content every time a user unlocked the device. Other apps in the batch would forward users to phishing websites that tried to steal their personal information. Sometimes attempts to steal users email or phone number were hidden under the guise of claiming a prize.
Trend Micro points out that even technically legal content, such as pornography, promoted by these apps were a scam. In their investigation, the security analysts paid for an adult video player pushed by the apps, which did not play any content.
Another batch of beauty apps went even further. Trend Micro discovered that a few of these photo filter apps that promised to “beautify” users’ pictures were actually stealing the photos. The app would upload a user’s photo to a private server. Instead of providing a filtered version of the pic in return, the app would display a picture with a fake message telling them they need to update the app. Trend Micro believes these stolen photos are used for other malicious activities, such as social media photos on fake accounts.
SEE ALSO: 'Fortnite' vulnerability put millions of accounts at riskThese apps were made to be incredibly difficult to catch. The developers behind them used compression archives, also known as “packers,” which basically make them hard to analyze. In addition, there’s no indication to a user that these apps were responsible for the pop-ups being shown on their Android phone. If a user were to attempt to uninstall applications in order to find the culprit, they would come across a problem there too. These fake beauty apps were hidden from a user’s application list.
In total, the 29 malicious apps were downloaded more than 4 million times. Three of the apps alone accounted for more than 3 million of the downloads.
This is far from the first time that malicious Android apps found their way to the Google Play store. While these apps have since been removed, the sheer number of downloads proves that Google simply isn’t moving fast enough to shut them down.
Topics Android Cybersecurity Google
Cooking With Pearl Buck by Valerie StiversSigrid Nunez’s Portraits of Animal Intelligence by Peter CameronEat This Book: A FoodJames Alan McPherson’s Powerful, Strangely Frightening Stories by Edward P. JonesStaff Picks: Peonies, Poetry, and Passing Things by The Paris ReviewA Tale of Fake News in Weimar Berlin by Sophie DuvernoyWriters’ Fridges: Jia Tolentino by Jia TolentinoWatch porn with your partner. It could help your relationship.Apple AirPods deal: $139 at AmazonEat This Book: A FoodDeath Valley by Brandon ShimodaThe Central Park Squirrel Census by Jamie AllenA Cultural History of First Words by Michael ErardGolden Globes nominees 2024: Here's the listIt’s not just you. ChatGPT is ‘lazier,’ OpenAI confirmed.My Lil Sister Lena by Ebony Flowers6 medical tech innovations from 2023 that could improve our livesBest gaming monitor deal: Get an Acer Predator for $100 offThree Sisters, Three Summers in the Greek Countryside by Karen Van DyckApple's spruced up Apple TV app looks way more like Netflix now Redux: A Summer Month Together by The Paris Review Redux: Celebrating Pride Month by The Paris Review Cooking With Pather Panchali Early Cyber Monday deal: Insignia 55 300+ early Cyber Monday deals: Amazon, Apple, Walmart, more Eric Sedeño takes the cringe out of Choosing Joy The Unfortunate Fate of Childhood Dolls YouTubers Jacksepticeye and CrankGameplays launch new podcast 'Brain Leak' Bye, bye blue checks: Twitter wipes legacy verified badges from the platform 200+ best Walmart early Cyber Monday deals for 2023 Will There Ever Be Another Writer Like Philip Roth? Stasher vs. Ziploc Endurables: What are the best reusable food storage bags? Philip Roth, 1933–2018 Staff Picks: Mermaids, Wrestlers, and Gawkers by The Paris Review Early Cyber Monday Fire TV deals 2023: Amazon's sale is live 9 early Cyber Monday laptop deals under $500 iMessage's invisible ink puts the fun in functional How to verify your Tinder profile with video selfies Who Gets to Be “Brooklyn Born”? On ‘Frankenstein,’ A Monster of a Book
2.5671s , 8221.9765625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Korean College Girl Room Salon (2025)】,New Knowledge Information Network