http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/galaxy-s-iii-and-galaxy-note-2-among-devices-vulnerable-to-malicious-apps-targeting-samsungs-exynos-processor/2012/12/20/5adbc4da-4a01-11e2-8af9-9b50cb4605a7_story.html?wpisrc=nl_tech
Samsung confirms: Many of its phones vulnerable to newly discovered hack
  a.. 
By John Koetsier | VentureBeat.com, Published: December 20 
Samsung acknowledged Wednesday that the CPU used in many of its phones, 
including the massively popular Galaxy S III, is vulnerable to a hack that can 
give attackers full access to your phone.

The vulnerability was discovered about a week ago by a security researcher 
named “alephzain,” who posted an overview of the exploit on XDA-Developers. 
Essentially, malicious code from shady applications can use a security hole in 
a phone’s source code to gain control of anything in physical memory … and 
thereby install apps, backdoors, or simply read your personal data.



Unfortunately, “alephzain” also posted working sample source code before 
informing Samsung … meaning that the bad guys could already have made apps to 
attack your Samsung phone.

In its statement, Samsung says it is working on patching the hole as soon as 
possible:

“Samsung is aware of the potential security issue related to the Exynos 
processor and plans to provide a software update to address it as quickly as 
possible. 

The issue may arise only when a malicious application is operated on the 
affected devices; however, this does not affect most devices operating credible 
and authenticated applications. 

Samsung will continue to closely monitor the situation until the software fix 
has been made available to all affected mobile devices.” 

This is not a vulnerability in the Android operating system as created by 
Google per se. The vulnerable portion is the kernel — the base level of an 
operating system — and Samsung has modified the Android kernel to run on its 
proprietary Exynos processor. Those modifications contain the unsafe code that 
enables the security breach.

If you’re concerned about your phone being vulnerable, there are a number of 
things you can do:

1. Don’t download any apps until Samsung releases a fix.

2. Or, only download apps from known good sources (e.g., Google Play).

3. Even at Google Play, only download apps that are from known and verified 
publishers.

4. Or, if you must, install an instant fix(which may have some negative effects 
on your phone’s functioning).


Copyright 2012, VentureBeat


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