Threatpost: Samsung Screwed Up Encryption on 100M Phones.
https://threatpost.com/samsung-shattered-encryption-on-100m-phones/178606/


One cryptography expert said that ‘serious flaws’ in the way Samsung phones 
encrypt sensitive material, as revealed by academics, are ’embarrassingly bad.’

Samsung shipped an estimated 100 million smartphones with botched encryption, 
including models ranging from the 2017 Galaxy S8 on up to last year’s Galaxy 
S21.

Researchers at Tel Aviv University found what they called “severe” 
cryptographic design flaws that could have let attackers siphon the devices’ 
hardware-based cryptographic keys: keys that unlock the treasure trove of 
security-critical data that’s found in smartphones.

What’s more, cyber attackers could even exploit Samsung’s cryptographic 
missteps – since addressed in multiple CVEs – to downgrade a device’s security 
protocols. That would set up a phone to be vulnerable to future attacks: a 
practice known as IV (initialization vector) reuse attacks. IV reuse attacks 
screw with the encryption randomization that ensures that even if multiple 
messages with identical plaintext are encrypted, the generated corresponding 
ciphertexts will each be distinct.

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