“A ‘master key’ that could give cyber-thieves unfettered access to almost any Android phone has been discovered by security research firm BlueBox,” BBC News reports.
“The bug could be exploited to let an attacker do what they want to a phone including stealing data, eavesdropping or using it to send junk messages,” The Beeb reports. “The loophole has been present in every version of the Android operating system released since 2009.”
The Beeb reports, “Writing on the BlueBox blog, Jeff Forristal, said the implications of the discovery were ‘huge.’ The bug emerges because of the way Android handles cryptographic verification of the programs installed on the phone.
“Android uses the cryptographic signature as a way to check that an app or program is legitimate and to ensure it has not been tampered with. Mr Forristal and his colleagues have found a method of tricking the way Android checks these signatures so malicious changes to apps go unnoticed,” The Beeb reports. “Any app or program written to exploit the bug would enjoy the same access to a phone that the legitimate version of that application enjoyed.”
Read more in the full article here.
MacDailyNews Take: Yet another reason not to settle for cheap knockoffs.
[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “m2” for the heads up.]
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