Google Play Store Detects Malware in Android App With 100 Million Downloads - Report

© AP Photo / AP Photo/Jenny KaneThis Sunday, Jan. 28, 2018, photo shows music streaming apps clockwise from top left, Apple, Spotify, Amazon, Pandora and Google on an iPhone in New York. A federal copyright board has raised the music streaming royalties for songwriters and music publishers by more than 40 percent. The decision announced earlier this weekend stems from a dispute pitting songwriters against steadily growing music streaming services sold by Spotify, Apple, Google, Amazon and Pandora.
This Sunday, Jan. 28, 2018, photo shows music streaming apps clockwise from top left, Apple, Spotify, Amazon, Pandora and Google on an iPhone in New York. A federal copyright board has raised the music streaming royalties for songwriters and music publishers by more than 40 percent. The decision announced earlier this weekend stems from a dispute pitting songwriters against steadily growing music streaming services sold by Spotify, Apple, Google, Amazon and Pandora.  - Sputnik International
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The Android-based CamScanner PDF creator app, created by Shanghai-based CC Intelligence, has been downloaded over 100 million times from the Google Play store since first becoming available in 2010, ZDNet reported Wednesday.

According to media reports, the Google Play Store removed the app after learning that it had recently begun delivering a trojan-horse virus.

Recent versions of the app included a new advertising library that contained malicious code that delivered malware to Android devices, according to Russian-based antivirus tech giant Kaspersky, cited by ZDNet.

Kaspersky noted that the "malicious code may show intrusive ads and sign users up for paid subscriptions".

The so-called trojan virus contained within the Camscanner PDF app is configured to connect to the attacker's servers, download additional code and then execute that code on Android devices that have the app installed, according to Kaspersky.

The app is no longer available in the Google Play store. A corresponding iOS version, however, is still available on the online Apple Store.

The Shanghai-based company reportedly relies on ads and in-app purchases to earn revenue from CamScanner. The company specializes in optical character recognition (OCR). Apart from its CamScanner app with OCR text-reading functionality, the firm sells apps that capture text from business cards, ZDNet noted.

Intrusive ads may be pesky, according to Kaspersky, but no consumer wants to pay for subscriptions they never signed up for.

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