A hidden system application bundled with Motorola smartphones has been caught intercepting user-initiated Amazon app launches and silently redirecting them through affiliate tracking URLs, raising serious concerns about supply chain integrity, user consent, and undisclosed revenue practices on premium Android devices.
The behavior was first reported by a Motorola Razr 60 Ultra user on Reddit, who noticed that tapping the Amazon app icon no longer opened the app directly. Instead, the device launched a browser session pointing to an unfamiliar URL, which subsequently redirected to Amazon.com with an embedded affiliate code.
Network traffic analysis revealed that a preinstalled, hidden system app called Smart Feed was the culprit. The app makes outbound requests to devicenative[.]com an external server that appears to supply target app configurations and affiliate codes.
When a user taps a shopping app icon in the launcher, Smart Feed intercepts the intent and substitutes it with a browser redirect carrying the monetization payload.
A hidden system application bundled with Motorola smartphones has been caught intercepting user-initiated Amazon app launches and silently redirecting them through affiliate tracking URLs, raising serious concerns about supply chain integrity, user consent, and undisclosed revenue practices on...
cybersecuritynews.com