Lookalike FIFA domains, fake social ads, and malicious streaming apps are turning a major sporting event into a layered fraud operation.
Gemini’s Android notification handling shows how an assistant can move from reading text to taking action, creating a narrow but serious trust problem for smart-home and meeting integrations.
Google has added a new Android anti-impersonation feature, fake call detection, to help blunt AI voice cloning and call spoofing as fraudsters make phone scams harder to spot.
CVE-2025-48595 has been placed in CISA’s exploited-vulnerability list, turning an Android Framework bug into a patching emergency for device owners and enterprise fleets.
A critical Android Framework integer overflow has moved from bulletin noise to active-defence priority, with patch timing now the real battleground.
Google’s June 2026 Android bulletin fixes 124 flaws, but the real priority is CVE-2025-48595, a zero-day that demands patch-level remediation rather than version-level complacency.
Google’s June security release for Android closes multiple vulnerability classes, but the operational risk often depends on whether a device actually receives and applies the fix.
A new Android protection is meant to spot calls that impersonate trusted contacts, signaling a shift from simple spam filtering to stronger trust controls.
Google’s latest Android security cycle pairs one exploited Framework flaw with 123 additional fixes, turning patch level into the first line of defense.
A reported development-time configuration issue raised the risk that Microsoft Android app downloads could have been exposed to unauthorized token access, underscoring how mobile identity security can hinge on one exact setting.
Google’s latest security bulletin is a broad cleanup, but one zero-day exploited in targeted attacks turns the update into an exposure race for unpatched devices.
Google’s June Android bulletin lands CVE-2025-48595 in the framework layer, where a no-click privilege bug can matter more than the headline suggests.
A framework-level zero-day in Android is being treated as an active exploitation risk, with the real story centered on privilege boundaries, patch speed, and fleet hygiene.
The messaging app is testing a sign-out flow that removes account access without wiping messages or settings, a small change with outsized usability meaning.
“Continue On” is built for smoother cross-device continuity, but any feature that carries app activity between devices also raises new questions about trust, session control, and user verification.
A discounted handset can become a surprisingly capable Linux platform, but the bargain still comes with constraints that matter once the phone is treated like real infrastructure.
The campaign around BTMOB RAT shows how modern malware is being packaged, licensed, and sold like software, lowering the barrier for criminals who want access to Android devices.
A phishing-delivered Android threat is being described as capable of stealing money, pulling data off the device, and handing an operator remote access - a reminder that one bad install can become a full mobile compromise.
A 2026 roundup of mobile application security testing tools points to a bigger reality: the real contest is whether testing actually fits modern release pipelines and covers the controls that matter.
A newly observed Android RAT is drawing attention because its value is not just in stealing data, but in giving an operator practical control over a victim’s phone once it is installed.