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ModZoo: A Large-Scale Study of Modded Android Apps and Their Markets.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

We present the results of the first large-scale study into Android markets that offer modified or modded apps: apps whose features and functionality have been altered by a third-party. We analyse over 146k (thousand) apps obtained from 13 of the most popular modded app markets. Around 90% of them are altered in some way when compared to the official counterparts on Google Play. Modifications include games cheats, such as infinite coins or lives; mainstream apps with premium features provided for free; and apps with modified advertising identifiers or excluded ads. We find the original app developers lose significant potential revenue due to: the provision of paid for apps for free (around 5% of the apps across all markets); the free availability of premium features that require payment in the official app; and modified advertising identifiers. While some modded apps have all trackers and ads removed (3%), in general, the installation of these apps is significantly more risky for the user than the official version: modded apps are ten times more likely to be marked as malicious and often request additional permissions.

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Keywords

Journal Title

eCrime

Conference Name

APWG 2024 Symposium on Electronic Crime Research (eCrime 2024)

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

IEEE

Publisher DOI

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as All Rights Reserved
Sponsorship
Nokia Bell Labs, European Research Council.