It was the best of times; it was the worst of time for Samsung. Across four days ending October 27, the Samsung Galaxy S23 was successfully hacked by elite security researchers using zero-day exploits. Four times. The iPhone 14 and Pixel 7 were left unscathed. However, it’s not all bad news, as the zero-day exploits have been handed over to Samsung to fix. Samsung now has 120 days to do so before the exploit methodologies are disclosed publicly.
There was, in fact, a fifth successful hack against the Samsung Galaxy S23 by Team Orca from Sea Security, but it used a previously known exploit. Meanwhile, researchers from NCC Group and Team Viettel were also able to execute successful zero-day exploits against the Xiaomi 13 Pro smartphone.As already mentioned, the full technical details of the successful zero-day exploits will not be made public until such a time that Samsung has had an opportunity to distribute a patch to fix the vulnerabilities. ZDI gives vendors a 120-day window within which to produce and distribute such a patch.
Pentest Limited executed an Improper Input Validation exploit, STAR Labs SG exploited a permissive list of allowed inputs, as did the ToChim team, while Interrupt Labs used an improper input validation exploit.The four teams of hackers involved in exploiting the Samsung Galaxy S23 were awarded a total of $125,000 for demonstrating their zero-day attacks live on stage. The fifth team, which didn’t use a zero-day exploit, was nonetheless awarded with a bounty of $6,250.
Those 58 zero-days impacted printers, routers, security cameras, and network-attached storage devices, among other consumer devices. The full list of successful exploits can be found on the
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