DroidJack allows criminals to spy on smartphone data traffic, eavesdrop on conversations and hijack the camera.
No further arrests have yet been reported.
"I can confirm that the NCA arrested a 28-year-old male from Carlisle under suspicion of computer misuse act offences," an NCA spokesman told the BBC.
The spokesman said the arrest was made in connection with the international DroidJack operation and added that the suspect has been bailed for six months.
Officers in the UK, Germany, France, Belgium and Switzerland raided several properties connected to suspected users of malware known as DroidJack.
The searches were reported by the AFP and Reuters news agencies while Europol also say that raids were conducted in the United States.
The German suspects were aged between 19 and 51.
'Every move' tracked
DroidJack is a remote access trojan or "Rat", which is openly sold online for $210 (£137), and affects Android devices only."It can track a user's every move without their knowledge," explained Peter Coogan, principal security response manager at Symantec.
"There was a documented case back in 2014, I think, where it was being sent out via spam email and pretending to be a bank. It is likely at that time that they were trying to steal banking details off the phone," he told the BBC.
Mr Coogan added that he has tracked discussion of the malware on underground hacking forums where DroidJack has been marketed.
"More people will have purchased it and are probably using it," he said
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