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Reverse Engineering of a commercial spyware for...

Marco Grassi
October 11, 2014

Reverse Engineering of a commercial spyware for iOS and Android

Marco Grassi

October 11, 2014
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  1. Reverse Engineering of a Commercial Spyware for iOS and Android

    Marco Grassi - Mobile Security Researcher @ viaForensics - @marcograss - [email protected] 1
  2. ➜ ~ echo $USER • R&D Team Member @ viaForensics

    • I work mainly on Android/iOS • Strong passion for RE, which I can hopefully share with this talk also. 2
  3. What we will talk about today? 3 We will discuss

    a in depth reverse engineering of a commercial spyware for Android and iOS WITHOUT discussing the ethical implications, we will remain on the technical side only, and the motivation of the RE is to understand better how it works. OVER9000 slides, we will skip a lot for time constraints, feel free to dive into them by yourself if you want more technical details that does not fit into the presentation.
  4. Levels like learning a game 4 Intro and Overview: The

    Basics This is what we will try to cover for time! constraints. Hidden Gems: The Special Moves Details: Combos This is what you can take a look after the talk in the slides or discuss after:
  5. mSpy • The target are consumer-level, not government- level, so

    no 0days here • It offers a fat stack of features, for an affordable price and with a nice user-friendly web panel to monitor your targets. 10
  6. mSpy • So again, the typical customer is not the

    one of Gamma FinSpy/Finfisher and others. • Those got already reversed and studied online. • Wondering if you are more likely to be targeted by a multimillion dollars spyware or by someone close to you that burns few €? 11
  7. 12

  8. Support for latest jailbreaks (Pangu, evasi0n7…) More details in the

    next slides. The device is mandatory to be jailbroken, otherwise the majority of user data cannot be accessed, for the strong sandbox even if the application is side loaded (mspy can’t obviously enter Appstore). 13
  9. Exfiltration is effective even on non rooted devices for lot

    of data. If root is present, it’s leveraged, ATM no exploits are provided This is related to the fact that Android is a more open platform and even a regular user application can access lot of user data if the right permissions are granted. 15
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  15. Let’s harvest some updated samples and start reversing! • For

    consumer customers that have to install it by themselves, you have to provide an user friendly experience. We will leverage this to get the latest versions • Trivial for Android • Little less for iOS 22
  16. Eat your frogs first: iOS • The iOS spyware is

    installed using a Cydia Repository: http://repo.mspyonline.com • How do we dump a Cydia repository? I don’t want to install anything yet in a uncontrolled way on my device. • Deb packages have the ability to trigger scripts pre and post installation, so better be careful and understand first what is going on. 23
  17. Cydia Repositories • A Cydia repo is just a standard

    APT repository, with its underlying structure. • More info can be found in this blog post by Saurik: How to Host a Cydia™ Repository - http:// www.saurik.com/id/7 24
  18. • Packages.bz2 contains the metadata of the repositories that we

    need. let’s grab it. • wget http://repo.mspyonline.com/Packages.bz2 • bzip2 -d Packages.bz2 • cat Packages • From Packages we obtain the urls to download all the .debs contained in this repository, so the spyware itself and the utilities. 25
  19. What’s in the repo? • HideCydia.deb - Component to hide

    and display Cydia by entering a secret key combination • iPhoneInternalService.deb - Core component of the spyware for iOS • AntiUpdateWrapper.deb - Metapackage that installs another third party package to kill the updates notification and the ability to update OTA from the device (if the infected user update, they will loose the jailbreak so the ability to monitor) • They can be pulled like we did with Packages.bz2 from the repository. We will look in depth at those packages later 26
  20. Android: the easy one • wget http://thd.cc/a.apk • That’s all,

    it’s self contained • We will reverse it in depth later. 28
  21. Proguard • Vanilla java obfuscator that ships with the Android

    sdk, free and opensource • Little brother of the “strongest” Dexguard by Saikoa • It will rename classes, packages, methods, variables to meaningless names like a, b, aa, slowing down the understanding of the code. • With the right tools, our life reversing will be much better with obfuscated applications. 32 Lesson Learned: If you want to protect your Intellectual Property, you may want to invest some money for a better protection than ProGuard…
  22. JEB Best Android interactive disassembler and decompiler on the market.

    ! Paid ! http://www.android- decompiler.com/ 34
  23. 35

  24. JEB • Robust Android disassembler and decompiler, useful for malicious

    samples with anti RE tricks • Renaming feature, to deobfuscate the code (we will use a lot this feature with a.apk, which is obfuscated). It reminds IDA Pro but for Android apps written in Java. • APIs and plugins • Lot of other features… highly recommended if you want to do some serious Android RE or Malware Analysis. 36
  25. Free Alternatives • The usual ones already covered extensively online,

    just google for android reversing! • dex2jar + java decompiler (jd-gui, jad, procyon, cfr decompiler) • apktool and/or smali/baksmali (outputs smali code) • jadx (interesting “new” dex to java decompiler, opensource) • others.. 37
  26. A bunch of other useful tools to use when the

    spyware is running • wireshark/tcpdump • burp or mitmproxy • Xposed Framework, Cydia Substrate 39
  27. Android High Level Overview of the Spyware! See the Appendixes

    for details without time constraints 40
  28. a.apk gets installed • Regular Android applications with a huge

    amount of permissions, to easily harvest data and leverage all the facilities from Android SDK. If there is Root, it is leveraged, but the Android implant works as well without root, thanks to the Android flexibility. • It become Device Administrator, to be less removable and have more capabilities without root • It hides in plain sight like a fake Android System Service 41
  29. 42

  30. • Until now, it’s pretty much the standard Android malware,

    it waits for the BOOT_COMPLETED events to start at boot, listen on SMS_RECEIVED with high priority, to catch them before the user apps, and eventually suppress them, as well as phone calls, for ambient listening. 43
  31. 44

  32. android.intent.action.BOOT_ COMPLETED • Message dispatched by the Android OS when

    the boot is completed • Third party apps can register for this message and get notified when the phone has booted • They then can take action, our spyware will start its service in background for its operations • Not so uncommon in non malicious apps, you can find that your favorite IM client registers as well for this event. 45
  33. Second stage APK • If root is available, the system

    partition gets remounted read write, and this second apk is implanted among the system apks. • Our malware now has a handy component running as the “system” user on Android (in terms of privileges, system on Android is second only to root) • Used as a proxy to pass tasks and get them executed as system user. • Like enabling your GPS without you noticing :) or placing a bugged keyboard to log your keystrokes 47
  34. Remounting the system partition as Read-Writeable 48 Manually RE, deobfuscated

    and then decompiled, like pretty much every snippet we will see
  35. Why system is read only? • On Android there is

    this “system” partition which contains the main part of the Android OS, which is mounted read only • What’s inside this partition is supposed to never change, so they leave it read only for optimisation and to avoid persistence of malware as well • If this system partition is assumed read only, to factory reset a device it’s enough to format the user data partition and you start with a new os installation. 49
  36. Copying in place the system component 50 FYI They use

    dd instead of cp because it’s often not included in the default Android "toolbox", for that we often install busybox
  37. 51

  38. Attention for compatibility and API changes 52 On API 19

    and above they use the priv-app folder
  39. Main components and summary • a.apk application • system helper

    application • mspy servers • Sensors (some of them use root) 53
  40. 54

  41. • From the Cydia repository we obtained 3 .debs to

    reverse • HideCydia.deb • AntiUpdateWrapper.deb • iPhoneInternalService.deb <== The main thing 56
  42. IDA Pro + Hex Rays With “crazy” adversary you need

    “crazy” tools. IDA Pro is an interactive disassembler, and the facto the best on the market for Reverse Engineering ! Paid ! Pretty much mandatory if you reverse native code ! Hex rays is a optional plugin with decompiler features 58
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  44. IDA Pro • Best interactive disassembler in the market •

    Almost mandatory if you want to get serious reversing native code • Tons of APIs and functionalities • Hex Rays, a paid plugin for code decompilation 60
  45. Alternatives • Hopper Disassembler. Great tool. Less features than IDA,

    but great for the price. • radare. Reverse engineering framework, both from command line and different UIs wrappers. • Many others, some of them platform dependant. 61
  46. A bunch of other useful tools to use when the

    spyware is running • wireshark/tcpdump • burp or mitmproxy • MobileSubstrate, Cycript 63
  47. iPhoneInternalService.deb 64 dpkg -x iPhoneInternalService.deb # Will do the job

    Regular app to activate the spyware LaunchDeamon for compatibility and MobileSubstrate Hooks, explained later LaunchDaemon for the spyware daemon for compatibility spyware binary and resources configs files and DB
  48. LaunchDaemons • Daemons generally started at boot by launchd (think

    of it as a sort OS X init) • Declared in a plist in various folder on OS X/iOS • iPhoneInternalService deploy one of those launchdaemons under /System/Library/ LaunchDaemons/ 65
  49. MobileSubstrate • MobileSubstrate is a framework developed by saurik that

    makes you able to patch code at runtime even if it’s not your code. • It’s often used to provide “iOS Tweaks”, but in the context of spyware, it can be used to “hook” methods and retrieve data in critical points, such as keystrokes, or the urls you visit in MobileSafari :) • It can also be used to implement trivial userspace rootkit functionalities, like hiding stuff (see HideCydia.deb) 67
  50. • iPhoneInternalService deploy a bunch of them in / Library/MobileSubstrate/DynamicLibraries

    • They are used to implement all the functionalities that require “getting into the system code”, like blocking calls for example, the dialer functionalities are implemented outside of the attacker’s code and there is no easiest way to drop the calls like on Android. 68
  51. 69

  52. a.apk Certificate • Issuer and subject are “android system update”

    • Another small deception trick to appear as a legitimate system component, at the eye of a unexperienced user. 75
  53. Support for all the 3 major Superuser applications To leverage

    *sort of* stealthy superuser permissions For example hiding notifications and stuff like that. 77
  54. 78

  55. Example: make silent Koush’s su for the spyware (no more

    notifications shown when they perform superuser tasks) 79
  56. HideCydia.deb Hide Cydia from the device to make less obvious

    that the device is jailbroken, and also harder to uninstall the spyware 80 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1sDt-gAryBM ~ 3 min
  57. How it works • It’s just a MobileSubstrate tweak like

    we covered before with the call blocker. • The .deb deploys HideCydiaHook.dylib and HideCydiaHook.plist in /Library/MobileSubstrate/ DyamicLibraries/ • The plist filters to load it in SpringBoard only. • If you write “4433*29342” in the search bar, Cydia will be hidden (or shown). 81
  58. Who is intellectsoft.org? • Some utils classes have this package

    name • Maybe they are the developers or maybe they are not, I don’t know. • In both cases I guess it’s better for them to don’t be associated with a spyware, having a regular Apps development business. • The whois of this domain have hints to be of the same owner of the .co.uk, which is the app development company one (no confirmations on this, only hints) 85
  59. Hints that the spy wares are developed by pro devs

    86 • They use tools quite common in the quality apps world, but quite not suited for spyware development • Bugsense for crash reporting • ORMLite for providing DAO goodness for spied data
  60. How a “sensor” to acquire data works? We will see

    how the sensor to spy Whatsapp messages on iOS and Android works. 88
  61. Whatsapp sensor on iOS • WhatsappSensor is a class representing

    the “sensor” to exfiltrate whatsapp messages • It will check if available the whatsapp database with the conversations • It will query this database and queue this messages to be dispatched to the mspy service to be processed and displayed in the webpanel 89
  62. Whatsapp sensor on Android 92 Chmod with superuser permission the

    database, then acquire it by querying it.
  63. How do they do key logging? Let’s take a look

    at the implementation of the key loggers on iOS and Android 94
  64. Android: lame implementation • They deploy their own IME (keyboard),

    cloned from the Latin opensource IME. • They use their SystemHelper to swap the current keyboard with their keyboard and grab all your keystrokes. • This approach is very limited • They should consider hooking the methods responsible for keystrokes handling :) • They do it on iOS thanks to MobileSubstrate 95
  65. iOS: Better Implementation • They deploy a key_hook.dylib as a

    MobileSubstrate plugin • They hook and add some methods to the UIKeyboardImpl class to handle and log those key events. • Sends them via IPC through a Mach port to the main spyware component. 97
  66. RocketBootstrap Quoting TheIphoneWiki: ”One common way processes communicate with each

    other on iOS and OS X is through a messaging system called mach ports. Each port is a channel that can either receive or send messages. There is a central registration system for these ports called bootstrap, where ports can be registered and accessed by a service name assigned to them. Recent versions of iOS restrict which names a process can access—MobileMail, MobileSafari and App Store apps are only allowed to access a very specific set of services that come with iOS. RocketBootstrap adds a secondary lookup service that doesn't restrict which processes can access which services." 98
  67. RocketBootstrap • They use rocket bootstrap to resolve a receiver

    “com.mspy.keylogger.receive.1”. • They bundle it with the app and install with iPhoneInternalService.deb • Opensource - https://github.com/rpetrich/ RocketBootstrap 99
  68. 101

  69. iOS: iPhone 4 • iPhone 4 • iOS 7.1.2 •

    Jailbroken with Pangu 1.1.2 102
  70. Android: Nexus 7 2012 WiFi • Asus Nexus 7 2012

    WiFi • Android 4.4.4 (KTU84P) by Google • Apps updated • Bootloader unlocked and Rooted • SuperSU by Chainfire as root manager app 103
  71. Android • Search for the system implant apk, it seems

    to don’t get removed even after uninstalling the app. But it’s not always installed (with no root access for example), so fallback on others indicators. • With a logical acquisition, search for the 2 package names of those apks if they are installed. • With a full filesystem acquisition, if they are installed, you are lucky and you can retrieve the private files of the spyware, to see config etc • with a full physical acquisition, you can also carve for deleted files if you can’t find the spyware and search for patterns • artifacts in the database of the superuser apps 105
  72. iOS • Requires jailbreak, so it’s already a huge footprint

    • check for the files deployed that we analysed (lot of them), and you can also retrieve the settings and the data collected, if the spyware is installed. 106