Daily News Roundup: Fake Samsung Updates App Had 10 Million Installs

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A fraudulent program called “Updates for Samsung” guaranteed to assist users install the latest firmware updates for their Samsung phones. In reality, it redirected users to an ad-filled site and tricked them into purchasing an expensive subscription.

Android updates could be a wreck , which ’s mostly the maker ’s error . If you want guaranteed timely updates, your very best bet is to purchase a Pixel phone. Regrettably, some terrible actors make the most of how obtuse updating a Samsung mobile could be and published a program called “Updates for Samsung” promising to make updates easier.

The program in question didn’t really fulfill the “convenient and simple ” guarantee. After opened, the program sends users into an ad-filled site that didn’t have Samsung firmware download hyperlinks. But you have to dig past a bucket load of advertisements, and hope the free download link that it provided didn’t wreck.

After malware analyst Aleksejs Kuprins dug into the code, he discovered that the program throttled its completely free download options to 56 KBps, also in analyzing normally crashed before finishing. “Updates for Samsung” provided a $35 premium subscription which removed those constraints for a prosperous fast download.

The subscription procedure was suspicious, because it didn’t utilize Google’s payment system, in breach of Play Store rules. Luckily, after reporting this data to Google, the program has been eliminated from the Play Store. It’s just a pity it took 10,000 installs and an external party discovering the issue for Google to put a stop to this abuse of users. [ZDNet]

RELATED: Fragmentation Isn’t Android’s Fault, It’therefore Manufacturers’

In Other News:

Tesla guarantees a free upgrade to fresh self-driving chips in older automobiles: Telsa unveiled a brand new “self-driving” chip created in house it promised had all of the power required to create self-driving possible. The issue? Older Tesla models don’t need it, and folks already paid for the self-driving add-on. The business promised that anyone who did cover the self-driving option would find a free hardware upgrade. [The Verge]
Amazon asks FCC for permission to establish satellites: Amazon would like to present nationally broadband and thinks it can accomplish that using 3,236 satellites. Dubbed “Project Kuiper” the company behemoth is taking the next step towards that end goal: requesting permission to launch. If this story sounds familiar, this ’s probably because SpaceX only started satellites for exactly the identical function. [GeekWire]
The hottest Windows 10 upgrade may cause color problems: Some users have discovered that after carrying the Windows 10 May 2019 Update, colors no longer display properly on their screen. Microsoft states it issued a repair, but users continue to complain even after updating. Here’s trusting Microsoft completely solves the problem shortly. [TechRadar]
HQ Trivia laid off employees, also is moving to a subscription version: If you forgot about HQ Trivia, don’t feel awful. So did everybody else. And that’s the issue. HQ Trivia, once the program everyone had to have, is the world and old information.   As such the company laid off a number of its staff and is trying to pivot to a brand new game using a subscription. At $10 per month, we don’t have high hopes to get a giant turnaround. [TechCrunch]
Firefox starts beta tests for about $ 5 ad-free information: Getting the information on the internet is a balance of options. Ads support the companies which bring you the information, although you might not like ads. Firefox, like Apple News+ before itthinks it has a fair solution. Pay $5 per month to skip the advertisements. Part of the subscription belongs to Mozilla, the other part to the sites you read. [International Business Times]
MovePass shuts down its program briefly: Moviepass, the beleaguered movie subscription service, has more bad information. The business is shutting down its program and services for an unspecified time. It guarantees to return, and users not to charge while the program down. The business says this is necessary for program updates. Clients can only hope it didn’t just run out of money again. [MarketWatch]
Apple analyzing FaceID and TouchID sign-in for iCloud.com: If you’re using the betas for iOS13 or MacOS 13, you can try out a fresh sign in option for iCloud. Rather than plugging in your password manually (or using your password manager to care for it), then you may use FaceID or even TouchID to register in (depending on your hardware). Probably a precursor to “Sign in With Apple” that the process sounds incredibly convenient when preserving safety. [9to5Mac]

Lightsail 2 is a remarkably exciting and exceptional satellite. To start in its own distinctive qualifications, crowdfunding helped bring the spacecraft to life.

You also won’t locate a means of propulsion in the satellite. Rather, as the name suggeststhe LightSail 2 will soon unfurl a wide set of sails (which double as a solar charger) and apply the impact of photons to move.

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