As many as 600 million Samsung phones may be vulnerable to attacks that allow hackers to surreptitiously monitor the camera and microphone, read incoming and outgoing text messages, and install malicious apps, a security researcher said.
The vulnerability is in the update mechanism for a Samsung-customized version of SwiftKey, available on the Samsung Galaxy S6, S5, and several other Galaxy models. When downloading updates, the Samsung devices don't encrypt the executable file, making it possible for attackers in a position to modify upstream traffic—such as those on the same Wi-Fi network—to replace the legitimate file with a malicious payload. The exploit was demonstrated Tuesday at the Blackhat security conference in London by Ryan Welton, a researcher with security firm NowSecure. A video of his exploit is here.
Thus will hackers be treated to front row seats to 600 million pockets full of lint.
(Score: 1) by anubi on Saturday June 20 2015, @07:24AM
I should have been a little more clear I was responding to the post about the XBox. To me, the XBox does only one thing... insist I buy more proprietary software that runs on it, and having to agree to whatever the proprietary software demands or I lose the use of my investment. No thanks.
"Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]