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Android apps digitally signed by China’s third-biggest e-commerce company exploited a zero-day vulnerability that allowed them to surreptitiously take control of millions of end-user devices to steal personal data and install malicious apps, researchers from security firm Lookout have confirmed.
The malicious versions of the Pinduoduo app were available in third-party markets, which users in China and elsewhere rely on because the official Google Play market is off-limits or not easy to access. No malicious versions were found in Play or Apple’s App Store. Last Monday, TechCrunch reported, Pinduoduo was pulled from Play after Google discovered a malicious version of the app available elsewhere. TechCrunch reported the malicious apps available in third-party markets exploited several zero-days, which are vulnerabilities that are known or exploited before a vendor has a patch available.
Sophisticated attack
A preliminary analysis by Lookout found that at least two off-Play versions of Pinduoduo for Android exploited CVE-2023-20963, the tracking number for an Android vulnerability Google patched in updates that became available to end users two weeks ago. This privilege-escalation flaw, which was exploited prior to Google’s disclosure, allowed the app to perform operations with elevated privileges. The app used these privileges to download code from a developer-designated site and run it within a privileged environment.
was reported to have 751.3 million average monthly active users. While still smaller than its Chinese rivals Alibaba and JD.com, PDD Holdings, Pinduoduo’s publicly traded parent company, has become the fastest growing e-commerce firm in that country.
After Google removed Pinduoduo from Play, PDD Holdings representatives denied the claims any of its app versions were malicious.
“We strongly reject the speculation and accusation that the Pinduoduo app is malicious from an anonymous researcher,” they wrote in an email. “Google Play informed us on March 21 morning that Pinduoduo APP, among several other apps, was temporarily suspended as the current version is not compliant with Google’s Policy, but has not shared more details. We are communicating with Google for more information.”
The company representatives didn’t respond to emails that asked follow-up questions and disclosed the results of Lookout’s forensic analysis.