Android Update Patches Exploited Zero-Day, 123 Other Vulnerabilities
Security WeekArchived Jun 02, 2026✓ Full text saved
Google says the Android vulnerability CVE-2025-48595 has been exploited in limited, targeted attacks. The post Android Update Patches Exploited Zero-Day, 123 Other Vulnerabilities appeared first on SecurityWeek .
Full text archived locally
✦ AI Summary· Claude Sonnet
Google on Monday announced its latest Android update, which includes patches for 124 vulnerabilities, including a zero-day that has been exploited in targeted attacks.
The exploited vulnerability is CVE-2025-48595, which Google describes as a high-severity privilege escalation issue affecting Android’s Framework component.
“There are indications that CVE-2025-48595 may be under limited, targeted exploitation,” Google said in its advisory.
There does not appear to be any information on the attacks exploiting CVE-2025-48595.
However, commercial spyware vendors have become the dominant force behind most zero-day exploits targeting Android devices, developing and selling sophisticated attack chains primarily to government clients. Google’s own researchers are often the ones who discover these exploits.
Of the remaining vulnerabilities patched in the latest Android versions, 18 have been assigned a ‘critical’ severity rating. They affect the framework, system, and Qualcomm closed-source components, and their exploitation can lead to privilege escalation and denial of service (DoS).
The other issues have all been rated ‘high severity’. They affect System, Framework, Kernel, and components provided by Imagination Technologies, MediaTek, Unisoc, and Qualcomm.
A majority can be exploited for privilege escalation and DoS attacks, and a few can lead to information disclosure.
Only one of them, a System vulnerability tracked as CVE-2026-0059, can be exploited for remote code execution.
Related: New BTMOB Android Malware Enables Full Device Takeover
Related: Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerability Patched in Android
Related: Google Adjusts Bug Bounties: Chrome Payouts Drop as Android Rewards Rise Amid AI Surge
WRITTEN BY
Eduard Kovacs
Eduard Kovacs (@EduardKovacs) is senior managing editor at SecurityWeek. He worked as a high school IT teacher before starting a career in journalism in 2011. Eduard holds a bachelor’s degree in industrial informatics and a master’s degree in computer techniques applied in electrical engineering.
More from Eduard Kovacs
Vulnerability in Popular Conference Software Granted Attackers a 100% Talk Acceptance Rate
Romanian Hacker Sentenced to Prison in US for Selling Access to State Network
LA Metro Cyberattack Linked to Iranian State-Sponsored Hackers
Anthropic Releases New Claude Sandbox, Security Guidance Plugin
Anthropic Expands Claude’s Enterprise Security Governance With 28 New Integrations
Ghost CMS Vulnerability Exploited to Hack Over 700 Websites
Oncology Institute Discloses Data Breach
Anthropic: Mythos Detected 23,000 Potential Vulnerabilities Across 1,000 OSS Projects
Latest News
Exclusive: How One Line of Code Put Billions of Microsoft Android App Downloads at Risk
Anthropic Expanding Mythos Access to 150 New Organizations
The Zero-Knowledge Threat Actor and the End of Responsible Disclosure
Critical Vulnerability in HP VoIP Phones Enables Enterprise Network Breaches
Oracle WebLogic Vulnerability Exploited in the Wild
Meta AI Hands Over High-Profile Instagram Accounts to Hackers
Supply Chain Attack Hits 32 Red Hat NPM Packages
Dashlane Brute-Force Attack Leads to Limited Encrypted Vault Downloads
Trending
Webinar: Third-Party Risk In Practice
June 4, 2026
Organizations are investing heavily in third-party risk management, but breaches, delays, and blind spots continue to persist. Join this live webinar as we examine the gap between how organizations think their third-party risk programs are performing and what’s actually happening in practice.
Register
Virtual Roundtable: CISO Forum 2026 Mid-Year Review
June 10, 2026
Explore how attackers are using AI to scale threats and how security teams can respond with AI-driven defenses. Protecting against unmonitored use of generative AI (Shadow AI) in business units and building and enforcing AI governance frameworks.
Register
People on the Move
Rapid7 announced that Wael Mohamed will assume the role of Chief Executive Officer, replacing current Chief Executive Officer Corey Thomas, who will become Executive Chairman of the Board.
Anurag Jain has been appointed Senior Vice President of Engineering at CodeHunter.
CTERA has appointed Tal Sarfaty as Senior Vice President of Cybersecurity.
More People On The Move
Expert Insights
The Zero-Knowledge Threat Actor And The End Of Responsible Disclosure
AI can help attackers generate malware, create malicious payloads, bypass simple security checks, and convert vague malicious intent into functional code. (Etay Maor)
Raising The Cybersecurity Stakes: Ante Up For The Agentic Era
CISOs are now facing machine-speed attacks and asking, “How do I agent?” The industry must provide remediation at scale. (Nadir Izrael)
Caught Off Guard: Securing AI After It Hits Production
As enterprises rush AI projects into production, security teams are increasingly being forced into reactive mode. (Joshua Goldfarb)
Cyber Resilience Is The New Business Continuity Plan
The organizations best prepared to face disruption are those that align security, continuity and risk management around what the business cannot afford to lose. (Steve Durbin)
Enhancing Data Center Security Without Sacrificing Performance
For AI data centers, where the stakes are the highest and performance constraints are the tightest, security and performance are no longer a zero-sum game. (Nadir Izrael)
Flipboard
Reddit
Whatsapp
Email