The independent security researcher Yan Zhu has discovered a serious security issue in the Gmail Android app allows ill-intentioned to send an email pretending to be someone else. Clearly a similar loophole could represent a gift for phishers and scammers, the issue dubbed Email Spoofing, enable the forgery of an e-mail header so that the email appears to have originated from someone else than the legitimate sender.
In a classic email spoofing attack, threat actors need an SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) server to send the email and a mailing application.
The researchers Yan Zhu, discovered a flaw in the Gmail Android app that allowed her to change her display name in the account settings so that the final recipient will not be able to know the identity of the email sender.
Zhu provided a PoC of her attack by sending an email to someone by changing her display name to yan “”[email protected],” as it visible in the following image.
no dkim validation error, etc. anyway i am prolly gonna stop bugging them. pic.twitter.com/2VmEk8u4kB
— yan⚠ (@bcrypt) 11 Novembre 2015
“[This] extra quotes [in the display name] triggers a parsing bug in the Gmail app, which causes the real email to be invisible,” Zhu told Motherboard. “It’s always been possible to spoof email envelope addresses, but spoofed emails now usually get caught by spam filters or get displayed with a warning in Gmail, With this bug, a hacker can get around these protections.”
Zhu reported the issue to the Google Security team at the end of October, but unfortunately the experts rejected the bug report saying it is not a security vulnerability.
“Filed a Gmail Android bug that lets me fake sender email address. [Google] said it’s not a security issue. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.” Zhu tweeted.
(Security Affairs – email spoofing, Gmail)