Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Update Whatsapp now! One call could give spies access to your phone

- BY SUNIL SHARMA

On May 13, 2019, Facebook revealed that an ‘advanced cyber actor’ has been spying on some users of its ridiculous­ly popular Whatsapp messaging app, thanks to zeroday vulnerabil­ity that allowed hackers to install spyware, silently, just by calling a victim’s phone.

The vulnerabil­ity is now fixed, which means that if you’re one of Whatsapp’s 1,500,000,000 users, you need to go to the well and drink up the latest version.

There’s a good chance your app’s already updated itself, but this is a severe vulnerabil­ity, so we advise you to check all the same. Whatsapp isn’t exactly shouting about this. The Facebook Security page, Whatsapp’s company website and Whatsapp’s Twitter feed are bereft of informatio­n.

The ‘What’s New’ sections of the app’s Google Play and Apple App Store listings would love you to know that with the latest version of the app you can now see stickers in full size when you long press a notificati­on but couldn’t find room for this is the only version that doesn’t allow remote spying.

Instead, Facebook has done the digital equivalent of pinning a security advisory for CVE-2019-3568 to the back of the toilet door in an unlit basement while nobody was looking. It reads as follows:

“Descriptio­n: A buffer overflow vulnerabil­ity in Whatsapp VOIP stack allowed remote code execution via specially crafted series of SRTCP packets sent to a target phone number.

Affected Versions: The issue affects Whatsapp for Android prior to v2.19.134, Whatsapp Business for Android prior to v2.19.44, Whatsapp for IOS prior to v2.19.51, Whatsapp Business for IOS prior to v2.19.51, Whatsapp for Windows Phone prior to v2.18.348, and Whatsapp for Tizen prior to v2.18.15.”

What the descriptio­n is trying to tell you is that some people who knew about this vulnerabil­ity used phone calls to vulnerable devices to install spyware that could listen in on calls, read messages and switch on the camera. The Telegraph reports that a ‘select number’ of users were affected and have linked the Whatsapp-installed spyware to NSO Group - the company behind the notorious spyware-sold-to-government­s known as Pegasus. That descriptio­n makes the incident sound like an attack against specific individual­s rather than an indiscrimi­nate attempt to spy on as many Whatsapp users as possible.

But that doesn’t stop other people abusing the vulnerabil­ity in different ways, so you should still update, even if you think you’re unlikely to have been affected by this attack.

How to update Whatsapp

IOS: Go to App Store > Updates. If Whatsapp has automatica­lly updated it will say ’Open’ next to it, so you don’t need to update it. If it says ’Update’, go ahead and tap that to install the latest version (2.19.51). If you want to check the current version number, go to Settings > Help within the app itself.

Android: Go to the Google Play Store > My Apps & Games on the menu. If Whatsapp has automatica­lly updated it will say ’Open’ next to it, so you don’t need to update it. If it says ’Update’, go ahead and tap that to install the latest version (2.19.134). If you want to check the current version number, go to Settings > Help > App Info in the app itself.

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