Since Joshua Drake of Zimperium announced his talk at the Black Hat conference on Twitter, speculation in the blogosphere has been rampant. BLACKHAT USA 2015 ...
Researchers at Zimperium have reported two new Stagefright vulnerabilities affecting one billion Android devices. When researcher Joshua Drake published details in August about critical Android ...
Exploit code for the Android Stagefright vulnerability was made public, and researcher Joshua Drake hopes organizations will test Android systems and devices against the code. Joshua Drake, the ...
Joshua Drake, the Zimperium zLabs researcher who revealed a bunch of bugs in Google's Android this week allowing a single multimedia text to hack 950 million phones, could be a lot richer than he is ...
Most hacker-related stories regarding Android are overdone with technopanic, but the newly discovered bug in Android’s multimedia playback tool Stagefright is one that has users more concerned than ...
The Stagefright security flaw in Android devices has only been a threat in theory -- until now. The bug, first discovered last summer, was called the "mother of all Android vulnerabilities" by the ...
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. That’s particularly disconcerting since some of Android’s mitigation strategies have proved to be not as ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Ewan Spence covers the digital worlds of mobile technology. If you're following Android at all, then this week you will have heard ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Security firm Zimperium today is publicly disclosing a ...
There’s a new round of Stagefright vulnerabilities that allows attackers to execute malicious code on more than one billion phones running ancient as well as much more recent versions of Google’s ...
What you need to know about the latest vulnerability. Attendees visit the Android booth during the Google I/O developers conference at the Moscone Center on May 15, 2013 in San Francisco, Calif. &#151 ...
A flaw called "Stagefright" in Google's Android operating system could let hackers take over a phone with a message -- even if the user doesn't open it. The flaw could "critically expose" 95 percent ...