DeUEDroid: Detecting Underground Economy Apps Based on UTG Similarity

Abstract

In recent years, the underground economy is proliferating in the mobile system. These underground economy apps (UEware) make profits from providing non-compliant services, especially in sensitive areas such as gambling, pornography, and loans. Unlike traditional malware, most of them (over 80%) do not have malicious payloads. Due to their unique characteristics, existing detection approaches cannot effectively and efficiently mitigate this emerging threat. To address this problem, we propose a novel approach to effectively and efficiently detect UEware by considering their UI transition graphs (UTGs). Based on the proposed approach, we design and implement a system named DeUEDroid to perform the detection. To evaluate DeUEDroid, we collect 25,717 apps and build the first large-scale ground-truth dataset (1,700 apps) of UEware. The evaluation result based on the ground-truth dataset shows that DeUEDroid can cover new UI features and statically construct precise UTG. It achieves 98.22% detection F1-score and 98.97% classification accuracy, significantly outperforming traditional approaches. The evaluation involving 24,017 apps demonstrates the effectiveness and efficiency of UEware detection in real-world scenarios. Furthermore, the result reveals that UEware are prevalent, with 54% of apps in the wild and 11% of apps in app stores being UEware. Our work sheds light on future work in analyzing and detecting UEware.

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