As good as Android operating system is, it is vulnerable to too many attacks. A new flaws has been discovered by researchers and it says to affects Android devices powered by Qualcomm chipsets. It is called QuadRooter.
the flaw is basically a set of four vulnerabilities affecting over 900 million smartphones and tablets running Google's mobile operating system, including Samsung's latest S7 flagships and even the acclaimed most secured Android smartphone by Blackberry DTek50.
For a user's phone to be attacked, he or she would have to be tricked into installing a malicious app onto their handset. No special permissions are required to install it, and affected phones can be completely controlled by the hacker. For this to happen, the hacker must successfully exploit one of the four flaws thus giving him (or her) root access to the phone. Once that is accomplished, the invader gains access to the camera, microphone, data and all of the remaining hardware.
Qualcomm was notified about the vulnerabilities - found in the company's software drivers - back in April this year. The chipmaker says that all the bugs were fixed at its end and patches were handed over to customers. While fix for three vulnerabilities have already made it to recent Android monthly security updates released by Google, one is still outstanding - it'll be be included in the September update.
How Do I Know If My Phone is Affected?
Go to playstore and downloadQuadrooter scanner app to scan your device if you are running Qualcomm chipset.
For now no one has a device which is fully secured says Check Point.
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