Samsung Galaxy phones were targeted by the sophisticated "LANDFALL" zero-day spyware, which stole personal data using a malformed image file.
If you use a Samsung Galaxy phone, you should be aware of a new security threat that may have put your personal data at risk.
A Samsung Galaxy zero-day spyware (LANDFALL) exploited a flaw via malicious photos for a year, allowing surveillance on S-series flagships.
A new vulnerability affecting Samsung Galaxy phones poses a hacking risk, as identified by Palo Alto Networks' Unit 42 ...
One particular deal has caught our eye with the Samsung Galaxy S25 currently down to its lowest ever monthly price at Sky. Normally £28 per month, it can currently be snapped up for £22 and a £12 ...
Security researchers at Palo Alto Networks' Unit 42 division have documented a previously unknown Android commercial spyware ...
Cryptopolitan on MSN
Hackers hijack Samsung Galaxy phones
Cybersecurity firm Unit 42 has discovered a spyware campaign on Samsung Galaxy devices exploiting a zero-day vulnerability to ...
Dagens.com on MSN
Middle-Eastern spyware targeting smartphones discovered after nearly a year of undetected data theft
A major cybersecurity alert has been issued for Samsung Galaxy users after experts uncovered a sophisticated spyware campaign ...
Explore this week’s top cyber stories: stealthy virtual machine attacks, AI side-channel leaks, spyware on Samsung phones, ...
Similar to other commercial-grade spyware, Landfall enables broad surveillance of victims by vacuuming up on-device data as ...
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