A newly disclosed vulnerability in Apache Tika has had the cybersecurity community seriously concerned because researchers have confirmed ...
Researchers have revealed details of two Android malware strains called SeedSnatcher and FvncBot. Upgraded version of ClayRat was also found in the wild.
FvncBot works as a security app built by mBank and attacks mobile banking users in Poland. The malware is written from scratch and is different from other banking trojans such as ERMAC whose source codes have been leaked.
According to Intel 471, the malware "implemented multiple features including keylogging by abusing Android's accessibility services, web-inject attacks, screen streaming and hidden virtual network computing (HVNC) to perform successful financial fraud."
Like the Albiriox banking malware, this trojan is shielded by a service called apk0day that Golden Crypt offers.
After the dropper app is launched, users are asked to download a Google Play component for security of the app. But in reality, it deploys the malware via session-based approach which other actors adopt to escape accessibility restrictions on Android devices version 13 and above.
According to Intel 471, "During the malware runtime, the log events were sent to the remote server at the naleymilva.it.com domain to track the current status of the bot." After this, the malware asks victims for accessibility services permission, it then gets privileges and connects to an external server.
FvncBot also triggers a text mode to analyze the device screen layout and content even in cases where an app doesn't allow screenshots by setting the FLAG_SECURE option.
Experts don't yet know how FvncBot is getting widespread, but Android banking trojans leverage third-party app stores and SMS phishing as a distribution vector.
According to Intel 471, "Android's accessibility service is intended to aid users with disabilities, but it also can give attackers the ability to know when certain apps are launched and overwrite the screen's display."
The firm added that the sample was built to "target Polish-speaking users, it is plausible we will observe this theme shifting to target other regions or to impersonate other Polish institutions."
Meta has started taking down accounts belonging to Australians under 16 on Instagram, Facebook and Threads, beginning a week before Australia’s new age-restriction law comes into force. The company recently alerted users it believes are between 13 and 15 that their profiles would soon be shut down, and the rollout has now begun.
Current estimates suggest that a large number of accounts will be affected, including roughly hundreds of thousands across Meta’s platforms. Since Threads operates through Instagram credentials, any underage Instagram account will also lose access to Threads.
Australia’s new policy, which becomes fully active on 10 December, prevents anyone under 16 from holding an account on major social media sites. This law is the first of its kind globally. Platforms that fail to take meaningful action can face penalties reaching up to 49.5 million Australian dollars. The responsibility to monitor and enforce this age limit rests with the companies, not parents or children.
A Meta spokesperson explained that following the new rules will require ongoing adjustments, as compliance involves several layers of technology and review. The company has argued that the government should shift age verification to app stores, where users could verify their age once when downloading an app. Meta claims this would reduce the need for children to repeatedly confirm their age across multiple platforms and may better protect privacy.
Before their accounts are removed, underage users can download and store their photos, videos and messages. Those who believe Meta has made an incorrect assessment can request a review and prove their age by submitting government identification or a short video-based verification.
The new law affects a wide list of services, including Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, Threads, YouTube, X, Reddit, Twitch and Kick. However, platforms designed for younger audiences or tools used primarily for education, such as YouTube Kids, Google Classroom and messaging apps like WhatsApp, are not included. Authorities have also been examining whether children are shifting to lesser-known apps, and companies behind emerging platforms like Lemon8 and Yope have already begun evaluating whether they fall under the new rules.
Government officials have stated that the goal is to reduce children’s exposure to harmful online material, which includes violent content, misogynistic messages, eating disorder promotion, suicide-related material and grooming attempts. A national study reported that the vast majority of children aged 10 to 15 use social media, with many encountering unsafe or damaging content.
Critics, however, warn that age verification tools may misidentify users, create privacy risks or fail to stop determined teenagers from using alternative accounts. Others argue that removing teens from regulated platforms might push them toward unmonitored apps, reducing online safety rather than improving it.
Australian authorities expect challenges in the early weeks of implementation but maintain that the long-term goal is to reduce risks for the youngest generation of online users.
Microsoft stirred controversy when it revealed a Teams update that could tell your organization when you're not at work. Google did the same. Say goodbye to end-to-end encryption. With this new RCS and SMS Android update, your RCS and SMS texts are no longer private.
According to Android Authority, "Google is rolling out Android RCS Archival on Pixel (and other Android) phones, allowing employers to intercept and archive RCS chats on work-managed devices. In simpler terms, your employer will now be able to read your RCS chats in Google Messages despite end-to-end encryption.”
This is only applicable to work-managed devices and doesn't impact personal devices. In regulated industries, it will only add RCS archiving to existing SMS archiving. In an organization, however, texting is different than emailing. In the former, employees sometimes share about their non-work life. End-to-end encryptions keep these conversations safe, but this will no longer be the case.
There is alot of misunderstanding around end-to-end encryption. It protects messages when they are being sent, but once they are on your device, they are decrypted and no longer safe.
According to Google, this is "a dependable, Android-supported solution for message archival, which is also backwards compatible with SMS and MMS messages as well. Employees will see a clear notification on their device whenever the archival feature is active.”
With this update, getting a phone at work is no longer as good as it seems. Employees have always been insecure about the risks in over-sharing on email, as it is easy to spy. But not texts.
The update will make things different. According to Google, “this new capability, available on Google Pixel and other compatible Android Enterprise devices gives your employees all the benefits of RCS — like typing indicators, read receipts, and end-to-end encryption between Android devices — while ensuring your organization meets its regulatory requirements.”
Because of organizational surveillance, employees at times turn to shadow IT systems such as Whatsapp and Signal to communicate with colleagues. The new Google update will only make things worse.
“Earlier,” Google said, ““employers had to block the use of RCS entirely to meet these compliance requirements; this update simply allows organizations to support modern messaging — giving employees messaging benefits like high-quality media sharing and typing indicators — while maintaining the same compliance standards that already apply to SMS messaging."