Whom Does Your Android App Talk To? | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Whom Does Your Android App Talk To?


Abstract:

Smartphone privacy and security work has focused mostly on malicious apps. We take a different angle by questioning whether good apps suffer from a lack of judgment and i...Show More

Abstract:

Smartphone privacy and security work has focused mostly on malicious apps. We take a different angle by questioning whether good apps suffer from a lack of judgment and interact with "bad" websites. We use the term bad websites to refer to entities that engage in dangerous or annoying activities that range from distributing malware, to phishing and overly aggressive ad spamming. The focus of our work is this relatively neglected aspect of security: "Whom does an app talk to?" In this paper, we design and implement AURA, a framework for identifying the hosts that an app talks to and evaluating the risks this communication entails. AURA makes use of both static and dynamic analysis. We studied 13,500 popular free Android apps that connect to 254,022 URLs and 1,260 malicious Android apps that connect to 19,510 URLs. Our main contribution is showing that good apps pose security risks as they contact at least one website that: (a) distributes malware (8.8% of apps), (b) are in a blacklist (15% of apps) based on the classification by VirusTotal and Web of Trust. Our work can raise awareness that even good apps need to be carefully evaluated, especially as people become more concerned about smartphone security and privacy.
Date of Conference: 06-10 December 2015
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 25 February 2016
ISBN Information:
Conference Location: San Diego, CA, USA

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