An Android application downloaded more than one billion times contains unpatched vulnerabilities that the app maker has failed to fix for more than three months. Mobile devices continue their march ...
Singapore-based Smart Media4U Technology said today that it fixed SHAREit vulnerabilities that may have allowed attackers to execute arbitrary code remotely on users' devices. The security bugs impact ...
SHAREit has fixed two flaws in its app that allow bad actors to authenticate their devices and steal files from a victim’s device. Two high-severity flaws in the SHAREit Android app allow an attacker ...
Attackers can exploit SHAREit permissions to execute malicious code through vulnerabilities that remain unpatched three months after app makers were informed. An Android app that’s been downloaded ...
Trend Micro says it has found “several” security flaws in the popular Android app ShareIt. ShareIt has been downloaded over a billion times from the Play Store, and, according to App Annie, was one of ...
In brief: The convenience of sharing files between all of your devices may come with some unwanted security risks, especially if you're using one of the popular apps in the Google Play Store to do so.
Popular app ShareIt has been found to harbor several vulnerabilities. These vulnerabilities could be abused by malicious actors to perform remote attacks. Popular Android file sharing app ShareIt has ...
A security researcher has discovered a number of vulnerabilities in Lenovo's SHAREit app, the worst being the use of "12345678" as a hard-coded, default password. The problems have been patched in the ...
An app that doesn’t require data app to share files with friends and family, SHAREit Lite, has been unveiled in Lagos. The online initiative of the SHAREit Lite app has started while users can ...
Version 3.0 offers enhanced usability thanks to the 'two new and five more' experience BEIJING, Sept. 2, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- SHAREit 3.0, the upgraded version of the world's leading peer to peer, ...
At what point should Google and Apple (and throw in F-Droid or whatever other App Store) be responsible for vetting the security of some of these apps? Regardless of recall laws, if the wheels come ...