National security agencies in Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand, the UK and the USA have jointly issued an advisory about the increasing prevalence of two kinds of spyware within apps that target communities of Uyghurs, Tibetans and Taiwanese. All three groups have endured oppression, invasion or threats of invasion from mainland China’s communist government.
The spyware comes within seemingly legitimate apps aimed at these specific communities, such as audio versions of the Quran in the Uyghur language and an app for a website that promoted Tibetan culture. These apps have been made available via official app stores. The authorities also cite numerous examples of the spyware being found in clones of apps with more widespread appeal, including:
- Adobe Acrobat;
- Skype;
- Telegram;
- the Truecaller app for blocking spam robocalls;
- a VPN provider; and
- Whatsapp.
Two kinds of spyware have been identified, named Moonshine and Badbazaar. Moonshine is Android spyware while Badbazaar has both iOS and Android variants.
The spyware is designed to hide malicious functions inside otherwise legitimate apps using a technique called ‘trojanizing’. These apps are able to perform real-time location tracking, and they can also access the phone’s microphone, camera and message library without the user’s knowledge.
Paul Chichester of the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) said:
We are seeing a rise in digital threats designed to silence, monitor, and intimidate communities across borders, and the use of these two forms of spyware is clearly unacceptable.
It is hardly news that governments use apps to monitor the movements of individuals who resist their authority. Nevertheless, the number of websites dedicated to spreading these surveillance apps and the appearance of these apps in legitimate app stores shows how everybody is at risk. A government that targets one particular race, religious or language community today may use the same techniques to oppress other groups in future.
The NCSC version of the technical analysis for Badbazaar and Moonshine is here. Their recommendations for how Uyghurs, Tibetans and Taiwanese can protect themselves from spyware is here. Their news release is here.



