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AutoSpill attack steals credentials from Android password managers
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<blockquote data-quote="Jonny Quest" data-source="post: 1068151" data-attributes="member: 99434"><p>Good article, Bryan, as I use 1Password (on Android 13). From your link:</p><h2>Impact and fixing</h2><p>The researchers tested AutoSpill against a selection of password managers on Android 10, 11, and 12 and found that 1Password 7.9.4, LastPass 5.11.0.9519, Enpass 6.8.2.666, Keeper 16.4.3.1048, and Keepass2Android 1.09c-r0 are susceptible to attacks due to using Android’s autofill framework.</p><p></p><p>Google Smart Lock 13.30.8.26 and the DashLane 6.2221.3 followed a different technical approach for the autofill process. They did not leak sensitive data to the host app unless JavaScript injection was used.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jonny Quest, post: 1068151, member: 99434"] Good article, Bryan, as I use 1Password (on Android 13). From your link: [HEADING=1]Impact and fixing[/HEADING] The researchers tested AutoSpill against a selection of password managers on Android 10, 11, and 12 and found that 1Password 7.9.4, LastPass 5.11.0.9519, Enpass 6.8.2.666, Keeper 16.4.3.1048, and Keepass2Android 1.09c-r0 are susceptible to attacks due to using Android’s autofill framework. Google Smart Lock 13.30.8.26 and the DashLane 6.2221.3 followed a different technical approach for the autofill process. They did not leak sensitive data to the host app unless JavaScript injection was used. [/QUOTE]
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