A number of popular mobile password managers are inadvertently spilling user credentials due to a vulnerability in the autofill functionality of Android apps. The vulnerability, dubbed “AutoSpill,” ...
Why it matters: The use of password managers has accelerated in recent years, and while that's a good way to protect your security online, it's by no means a perfect solution. New research has ...
This FAQ dives into the many nuances that make AutoSpill hard for most people (yours truly included) to understand. This post wouldn’t have been possible without invaluable assistance from Alesandro ...
BLACK HAT EUROPE – London – Researchers demonstrated how the most widely used password managers can leak credentials from Android devices when using the mobile operating system's WebView autofill ...
Security researchers developed a new attack, which they named AutoSpill, to steal account credentials on Android during the autofill operation. In a presentation at the Black Hat Europe security ...
Each one of our favorite Android phones comes with Google's password manager built in. It offers a convenient and safe way to store your credentials and is much better than relying on your memory to ...
Using the same password on multiple apps and websites is always a bad idea. If one of your accounts gets compromised in a data leak, you may lose access to all the other accounts on which you have ...
Passkeys are replacing passwords fast, but they don’t cover every login yet. Find out why a password manager still matters.
To be clear, this is only through the autofill pathway, and if you manually copy and paste from your password manager, this isn't a problem? (Except for the possibility that your keyboard app is ...