New Delhi - A rogue application can take photos and videos without specific camera permissions.
Published: Thu 21 Nov 2019, 9:08 AM
Updated: Thu 21 Nov 2019, 11:24 AM
WhatsApp snooping via spyware Pegasus has shown smartphones have become new-age surveillance tools and now, security researchers have identified that selfie camera in your smartphone can easily spy on you.
According to Erez Yalon and Pedro Umbelino, security researchers at cyber security firm Checkmarx, they have found vulnerabilities impact the camera apps of smartphone vendors like Google Pixel and some Samsung devices in the Android ecosystem, presenting significant implications to hundreds-of-millions of smartphone users.
Both Google and Samsung have issued a security patch for the vulnerabilities.
"Having a Google Pixel 2 XL and Pixel 3 on-hand, our team began researching the Google Camera app, ultimately finding multiple concerning vulnerabilities stemming from permission bypass issues," said Yalon.
After further digging, they found that these same vulnerabilities impact the camera apps of other smartphone vendors in the Android ecosystem.
After a detailed analysis of the Google Camera app, the team found that by manipulating specific actions and intents, an attacker can control the app to take photos and/or record videos through a rogue application that has no permissions to do so.
Additionally, they found that certain attack scenarios enable malicious actors to circumvent various storage permission policies, giving them access to stored videos and photos, "as well as GPS metadata embedded in photos, to locate the user by taking a photo or video".
It is known that Android camera applications usually store their photos and videos on the SD card. Since photos and videos are sensitive user information, in order for an application to access them, it needs special permissions: storage permissions.
"Unfortunately, storage permissions are very broad and these permissions give access to the entire SD card. There are a large number of applications, with legitimate use-cases, that request access to this storage, yet have no special interest in photos or videos," said the researchers.
It means that a rogue application can take photos and/or videos without specific camera permissions, and it only needs storage permissions to take things a step further and fetch photos and videos after being taken.
Additionally, if the location is enabled in the camera app, the rogue application also has a way to access the current GPS position of the phone and user.
Google said that "We appreciate Checkmarx bringing this to our attention and working with Google and Android partners to coordinate disclosure.
"The issue was addressed on impacted Google devices via a Play Store update to the Google Camera Application in July 2019. A patch has also been made available to all partners," the company said.
Samsung has also patched the vulnerability, said the researchers.