Security researchers of the security group at the Free University of Amsterdam found a hole in Android. The scoop in Dutch - news is 10hrs old at time of writing, I didn't find an English source yet. Heck, the university hasn't even put out a press release, even though this is currently making a splash in the Dutch news.
In short, the researchers hacked the user's (desktop) browser and then installed (via this browser) a malicious app on the phone.This gave them basically full control over the phone: turning camera on/off, replacing installed apps with malicious versions, intercepting text messages, etc. In fact, they used this to reduce a common version of two-factor authentication (know password and have phone) to only one factor: they managed to intercept verification codes (text messages) sent by a bank.
The problem is not in a specific version of Android, but in the deep integration between Google's websites and Android. Google has been made aware of the problems late 2014, but has yet to publicly reply.
(Score: 2) by Nerdfest on Sunday June 28 2015, @03:03PM
People really should have two factor authentication enabled on their Google accounts as well. It
's been available for years, it's open source, and it works with other services like DropBox and can be used for SSH as well.
(Score: 4, Interesting) by hankwang on Sunday June 28 2015, @04:37PM
How would that prevent a rogue browser extension from abusing your account once you have logged in using 2FA?
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