Millions of Android smartphones are wide open to attack

collected by :Andro Alex

The good news is that there is an easy fix if you have one of these potentially vulnerable applications: Uninstall it. According to a paper detailing the alleged flaw, the problem lies within apps that create open ports on cellphones. The apps appear to leave the security barn door wide open, in other words, and malicious actors can stroll right in. A group of researchers has determined that hundreds of apps in the store have a gaping security hole that potentially allows hackers to implant malware and steal data from millions of android smartphones. Unfortunately, unless the problem is systematically addressed, this is a vulnerability that will be with us for a long time to come.


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Google announces last security update dates for Nexus and Android phones
Google has previously announced when various Nexus phones would stop getting OS updates, and the company has updated that list to note when phones in the Nexus and Pixel lines will stop getting security updates, as noted by Droid Life. While using a phone with an outdated operating system is occasionally annoying, the thing that signifies the true death of a smartphone is when it stops getting security patches. None of this is strictly news, given that Google has had a policy in place for a while that Nexus and Pixel devices will "get security patches for at least 3 years from when the device first became available on the Google Store, or at least 18 months from when the Google Store last sold the device, whichever is longer." But it's nice to have everything laid out in one place to easily find out when your phone won't get updates.


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