Is Boost for Lemmy vulnerable to the webp exploit?
What version of libwebp does Boost use and if it is currently vulnerable, when can we expect an update to fix this issue? The affected versions of libwebp are 0.5.0 to 1.3.1.
Not really, just temporarily not using apps where random people can post images that are not re-encoded. Turns out this is very few apps, but sadly every lemmy app falls under this category.
Depending on where the library lives in the Android ecosystem the update could be pushed by the play store framework as part of it's self-update capability or it could be pushed by the OEM with the next system OTA. If it's part of a system update you're at the mercy of the OEM's OTA schedule, Samsung hasn't pushed anything for my tablet in like 8mo, same for my OnePlus phone before the update this week.
Based on this discussion here (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37658635) it sounds like we're all waiting for an OEM OTA, for some reason the video codecs are rolled into the play framework's updates but not the image decoding libraries.
People running LineageOS and other AOSP based firmwares should be covered after their ROMs integrate the next month security patch.
Welcome to the wonderful world of Android. They're rolled into the monthly AOSP security patch and end users are at the mercy of the OEM's update schedule.
This is why Pixel phone regular updates are a big deal, and a reason to run a regularly updated third party ROM like LineageOS.
As a person that’s been rolled into smartphones via work (iPhone 3Gs) and then never daily driven an Android, but always thought it might be more to my liking, I’m aghast. How can this be accepted? I now understand why large botnets often is comprised of Android devices.
Zero days aren't the big driver of botnets, there are millions (if not hundreds of millions) of very cheap, very old, android devices out there. If you look at the periodic stats Google releases >50% of devices are running an Android version <= 10. Something like 20% of Android devices (at least according to the stats Google provides) running Android <= 5.
For the WebView, I'm quite sure Google Play Services can update the component regardless of what the OEM pushes out.
So in that case, the system version right after a factory reset would be outdated, but as long as you're using your phone and connected to the internet, it should be updated.
I'm sure it can. The question is, will it. Part of the reason Google started updating apps on their side and removing feature updates from Android was because carriers and service providers weren't quick to update anything including security updates. It's one of the big selling points of the pixel line of phones. RCS is a very good example. The main cell providers did not want to take on RCS messaging and went as far as trying to make their own fork. They've done this with wallet apps back in the day as well.