Samsung Galaxy Spyware Scandal: How LANDFALL Went Unnoticed for a Year!
An unknown Android spyware called LANDFALL exploited a Samsung Galaxy zero-day for nearly a year. It recorded calls, tracked locations, and harvested photos before Samsung patched it. While the cyber sleuths can’t confirm who was behind it, the spyware’s precision suggests a well-funded espionage operation, not your garden-variety cyber criminal.

Hot Take:
Looks like Samsung Galaxy devices were the hot ticket for a year-long “Spy-fi” thriller, starring an unseen villain named LANDFALL. It’s a classic tale of espionage, complete with zero-day exploits, secretive spying, and Samsung’s blockbuster patch release that finally put an end to the suspense. Welcome to the gadget world’s version of Mission Impossible where the stakes were high, and the clicks were zero!
Key Points:
- LANDFALL is an Android spyware that exploited a zero-day vulnerability in Samsung Galaxy devices.
- The espionage campaign mainly targeted users in the Middle East, affecting devices running Android versions 13-16.
- The attack involved sending a malicious image to the victim’s device in a “zero-click” manner.
- Samsung patched the vulnerability after nearly a year of exploitation.
- The spyware shares similarities with previous attacks linked to the UAE’s Stealth Falcon group.
