In an increasingly digital world, the importance of mobile security cannot be overstated. With millions of apps available on Google’s Play Store and Apple’s App Store, users trust developers to safeguard their personal information. Unfortunately, this trust is often misplaced.
A key step in preventing unauthorized access to user data is encryption, especially when it comes to moving data from device to server and back again. If implemented incorrectly by app developers, it can expose users to a host of potential attack scenarios, including data theft, eavesdropping, and man-in-the-middle (MitM) attacks, just to name a few.
Read more…
Source: Symantec
Related:
- New Slipstream NAT bypass attacks to be blocked by browsers
November 9, 2020
Web browser vendors are planning to block a new attack technique that would allow attackers to bypass a victim’s NAT, firewall, or router to gain access to any TCP/UDP service hosted on their devices. The attack method, dubbed NAT Slipstreaming, was discovered by security researcher Samy Kamkar and it requires the victims to visit the threat ...
- Apple Patches Bugs Tied to Previously Identified Zero-Days
November 6, 2020
Apple has patched three previously identified zero-day vulnerabilities in its iPhone, iPod and iPad devices potentially related to a spate of related flaws recently discovered by the Google Project Zero team that also affect Google Chrome and Windows. Apple this week released iOS 14.2 and iPadOS 14.2, which patch a total of 24 vulnerabilities—including the three ...
- Cisco Zero-Day in AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client Remains Unpatched
November 5, 2020
Cisco has disclosed a zero-day vulnerability – for which there is not yet a patch – in the Windows, macOS and Linux versions of its AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client Software. While Cisco said it is not aware of any exploits in the wild for the vulnerability, it said Proof-of-Concept (PoC) exploit code has been released, opening ...
- Attacks on industrial enterprises using RMS and TeamViewer: new data
November 5, 2020
In summer 2019, Kaspersky ICS CERT identified a new wave of phishing emails containing various malicious attachments. The emails target companies and organizations from different sectors of the economy that are associated with industrial production in one way or another. We reported these attacks in 2018 in an article entitled “Attacks on industrial enterprises using RMS ...
- VMware Issues Updated Fix For Critical ESXi Flaw
November 4, 2020
VMware issued an updated fix for a critical-severity remote code execution flaw in its ESXi hypervisor products. Wednesday’s VMware advisory said updated patch versions were available after it was discovered the previous patch, released Oct. 20, did not completely address the vulnerability. That’s because certain versions that were affected were not previously covered in the earlier ...
- Hacker group uses Solaris zero-day to breach corporate networks
November 2, 2020
Mandiant, the investigations unit of security firm FireEye, has published details today about a new threat actor it calls UNC1945 that the security firm says it used a zero-day vulnerability in the Oracle Solaris operating system as part of its intrusions into corporate networks. Regular targets of UNC1945 attacks included the likes of telecommunications, financial, and ...

