Security experts from Kaspersky Lab spotted a new stalkerware, dubbed MonitorMinor (Monitor.AndroidOS.MonitorMinor.c), that can track Gmail, WhatsApp, Instagram, and Facebook user activity.
Stalkerware is commercial monitoring software or spyware that is used for stalking, it is usually used to secretly spy on family members or colleagues.
According to the experts, MonitorMinor is more powerful than all existing software of its family.
Stalkerware are able to gather the victim’s current geolocation, to intercept SMS and call data, and sometimes implements geofencing features,
MonitorMinor outstands because it also allows spying on other communication channels such as instant messaging applications.
The sample we found (assigned the verdict Monitor.AndroidOS.MonitorMinor.c) is a rare piece of stalkerware that can do this.
Experts discovered that the author of the stalkerware leverage the presence of the SuperUser-type app (SU utility) which grants root access to the system.
“In a “clean” Android operating system, direct communication between apps is prevented by the sandbox, so stalkerware cannot simply turn up and gain access to, say, WhatsApp messages. This access model is called DAC (Discretionary Access Control).” reads the report published by Kaspersky.
“The situation changes if a SuperUser-type app (SU utility) is installed, which grants root access to the system.” “It is the presence of this utility that the creators of MonitorMinor are counting on.”
Once escalated privileges by running the SU utility, the malware gains full access to data in the following apps:
MonitorMinor is also able to extract the file /data/system/gesture.key from the device, which contains the hash sum for the screen unlock pattern or the password. MonitorMinor operator could use it to unlock the device, this is the first stalkerware that implements such a function.
The persistence mechanism implemented by the malware is very efficient and leverages the root access. The stalkerware remounts the system partition from read-only to read/write mode, then copies itself to it, deletes itself from the user partition, and remounts it back to read-only mode.
Victims will not able to remove the spying software using regular OS tools.
MonitorMinor leverages the Accessibility Services API to intercept events in the controlled apps, even without root access it is able to operate effectively on all devices with this API.
The malware also implements a keylogger through this API, it also allows operators to monitor the clipboard and forwards the contents.
The stalkerware also allows its owner to:
According to Kaspersky most of the installs of this stalkerware are in India (14.71%), followed by Mexico (11.76%), Germany, Saudi Arabia, and the UK (5.88%). Experts also noticed the presence of a Gmail account with an Indian name is into the body of MonitorMinor, a circumstance that suggests it was developed by an Indian developer.
“MonitorMinor is superior to other stalkerware in many aspects. It implements all kinds of tracking features, some of which are unique, and is almost impossible to detect on the victim’s device.” concludes Kaspersky. “If the device has root access, its operator has even more options available.
| [adrotate banner=”9″] | [adrotate banner=”12″] |
(SecurityAffairs – MonitorMinor, malware)
[adrotate banner=”5″]
[adrotate banner=”13″]
Fintech firm Figure confirmed a data breach after hackers used social engineering to trick an…
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) adds a flaw in BeyondTrust RS and…
A new alleged Russia-linked APT group targeted Ukrainian defense, government, and energy groups, with CANFAIL…
A new threat actor, UAT-9921, uses the modular VoidLink framework to target technology and financial…
Attackers quickly targeted BeyondTrust flaw CVE-2026-1731 after a PoC was released, enabling unauthenticated remote code…
Google says nation-state actors used Gemini AI for reconnaissance and attack support in cyber operations.…
This website uses cookies.