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Google itself & other smartphone makers failed to fix month-old security flaw in Android

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Google alerts users that despite being brought to the notice of several smartphone manufacturers, five previously disclosed security problems affecting Android smartphones continue to exist. In a blog post, Google's Project Zero asserts that the security flaws have been known about for some time and that phone manufacturers are already aware of them.  Due to the problem, users of smartphones made by Samsung, Xiaomi, Oppo, and Google are now susceptible to hacking. Elon Musk claims that if Twitter's apps are removed from app stores, he would build his own smartphone. Android The problem at hand is an exploit that uses a flaw in Mali mobile graphics processors to target Google's Pixel 6 smartphone. According to PCMAG, the holes may possibly give a hacker "broad" access to a user's personal information stored on a phone as well as total control over the user's device. According to Ian Beer, a researcher at Project Zero, this is due to security weaknesses that could result in "kernel memory corruption" and "physical memory addresses being leaked to unprivileged userspace." Project Zero claims that, with the exception of Google, none of the implicated phone makers have publicly acknowledged the issues or specified how or whether they would be fixed. Also Read: Easiest Way To Factory Reset Windows 10, Step-By-Step When a vulnerability is found, it is frequently disclosed to the makers of the underlying technologies, like chips.  These businesses, commonly referred to as "upstream" firms, notify the consumer-end company of the software flaw fix after which they are required to add a security patch in their software interface, according to TechCircle. Common unpatched security flaws, also referred to as "zero-days," are frequently reported to companies under strict non-disclosure agreements; they are only made public after a security patch has been released. This is done to stop malicious hackers from using the data to target users, which may have led to users having their personal information stolen from their devices in this instance. Users are recommended to patch their devices as soon as a security update is made available for greater security. The same is true for companies and vendors.

By Raulf Hernes

If you ask me raulf means ALL ABOUT TECH!!

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