Cloud-based Android devices leveraged as dropper accounts for financial fraud
Updated:
· First: 25.03.2026 18:05
· 📰 1 src / 1 articles
Cloud phone platforms—remote-access Android environments hosted in data centers—are increasingly used by threat actors to establish and manage dropper accounts for financial fraud. These environments emulate legitimate smartphones, evading traditional device fingerprinting and emulator detection due to realistic hardware identifiers, sensor data, and mobile network characteristics. Fraud losses in the UK attributed to Authorized Push Payment (APP) scams exceeded £485.2 million in 2022, with dropper accounts identified as a significant vector. Cloud phone services, rented at low cost online, allow operators to control multiple virtual devices without physical hardware, enabling scalable abuse. In some cases, pre-verified bank accounts linked to cloud phone devices are resold on darknet markets, transferring both account access and device context to new actors. This undermines banks’ reliance on device recognition for fraud detection, increasing the risk of transaction approval without additional scrutiny.