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by ddod
1185 days ago
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> If they want to spam a million users they could do that too, although these kinds of things are typically not done this way That seems like a convenient assertion not based on evidence. Without trying to sound confrontational, it appears as if you are a current employee of Google, which might have colored your comment and should probably have been disclosed. |
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With that out of the way, and the obvious “please ask before quoting me in a news article and absolutely do not treat this as any sort of official Google thing”, this bug is quite serious and of the kind you would typically see in a targeted attack. As I mentioned above, you don’t really want to be noisy with how you’re using an exploit because then people will catch on and try to defend against it. Plus, you generally want a specific thing from the person you’re targeting. Hacking into a million phones and getting value out of it is pretty hard. For targeted attacks things like personal information and specific assets are valuable. On a wide scale, what are you going to do? Steal credit card numbers and wallet keyphrases for a handful of popular clients? Why not just try to pwn the app itself, or phish people, which is a lot less effort?
I don’t want to sound like I’m making this claim because it sounds better if it’s not used for widespread attacks. It absolutely can be used for this, which is why its capabilities are very concerning. But the reasoning behind this is based on what the market for exploits looks like, not just speculation. Large-scale uses of them are typically cheap reuses of n-days by unsophisticated attackers (which is something I do actually deal with personally). In the very rare cases you see actual 0-days used (I can actually mention one now, search for “Pinduoduo”!) they are not of the baseband variety but typically sandbox escapes and abuse of APIs that allow for background execution, accessibility access, and the like.