A new version of the RedHook Android malware abuses the Android Wireless Debugging (Wireless ADB) mechanism in a novel way to ...
RedHook abuses Android’s Wireless Debugging feature to gain powerful shell-level access without a computer. The malware can watch your screen, capture keystrokes, steal data and control apps remotely.
A new version of RedHook Android malware uses your phone's own built-in debugging tool to take remote control of your device ...
Threat actors have brought back the RedHook malware, which first appeared in 2025, but now has new tricks up its sleeve.
The post RedHook Malware Just Got Scarier — It Can Now Control Your Android Phone Wirelessly appeared first on Android ...
An image of Android's wireless debugging settings page on a Pixel phone. Original photo by Ryan Haines. Gemini Nano Banana Pro was used to place the screenshot onto the screen. Launched with Android ...
Researchers have uncovered an updated RedHook malware that can gain shell privileges by tricking users into giving ...
Building directly for Android beats creating web apps by a mile.
Seattle startup logcat.ai has raised $2.55 million in pre-seed funding to build AI agents for debugging and developing device ...
Simple Guide 1. Use the Built-in Battery Health Tool (Android 15+) Starting with Android 14, Google introduced a na ...
A new system service to check if an app is registered to a verified developer will be rolled out this month. Google announced its Android ...
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