A New Vulnerability In WhatsApp Allowed Hackers To Hijack Your Phone
Saanvi Araav
Recently, researchers have discovered a significant vulnerability in WhatApps that could allow hackers to get access to our phones, thus steal our data.
- Photos In WhatsApp Chats Will Self-Destruct If This Feature Comes To Life
- How To Export Your Old Messages From Social Media
- WhatsApp Defends Its Updated Privacy Policies, What Does It Have To Say?
Recently, a group of security researchers has discovered a significant vulnerability in the WhatApps app. This vulnerability could allow hackers to get access to our phones, thus steal our data. They accomplished that by sending out malicious GIF. This issue is a double-free vulnerability. It means that particular memory corruption could open the app to the hacker or crash the app, which in turn compromises the device security.
How does it work?
From the technical details, we learned that the attacker would send a particular WhatsApp message to the user with a modified GIF. Then when the user opens the photo gallery of their WhatsApp, that bug will get out. And there are likely some certain Android versions where users face the highest risks of being affected by this bug.
According to Awakened (a developer), the exploit only works on devices with version 2.19.230 of WhatsApp or older. The platform has officially patched this vulnerability with the version 2.19.244.
He also added that the exploit functions on Android 9.0 and 8.1; however, it does not work with Android versions 8.0 and lower. The developer added:
According to WhatsApp, there were no reasons to think that this vulnerability has impacted anyone. Moreover, the company has resolved this issue with a patch.
A spokesperson of WhatsApp said that this issue has been reported and resolved last month.
Lots of problems with WhatsApp recently
WhatsApp has faced numerous security headaches before. Back in October last year, a researcher released information about another vulnerability of the app. With that vulnerability, hackers could seize an account's control by video call. Recently, there was a bug in the app that hackers exploited to spread their Pegasus malware.
Featured Stories
ICT News - Mar 24, 2026
OpenAI on the Brink: Major Setbacks Signal the Bursting of the AI Bubble
ICT News - Mar 20, 2026
Top 10 Most Popular Social Media Sites Based on User Count in 2026
ICT News - Mar 19, 2026
Billion Dollar Blunder: Meta Shuts Down Metaverse After Wasting $80,000,000,000.00
ICT News - Mar 18, 2026
X to Introduce Regional Controls for Posts and Replies
ICT News - Mar 17, 2026
Is DLSS 5 Helping Games or Hurting Developers' Creative Style?
ICT News - Mar 16, 2026
AI's Role in Warfare: US Strikes on Iran Unveiled
ICT News - Mar 15, 2026
Elon Musk's Bold Chip Venture: Tesla's Massive Fab Initiative Sparks AI Hardware...
ICT News - Mar 14, 2026
Elon Musk's High-Stakes $109 Billion Lawsuit Against OpenAI and Microsoft
ICT News - Mar 05, 2026
X Platform Implements Strict Measures Against Fake AI-Generated Videos Amid Iran...
How To - Mar 04, 2026
Getting Started with AI: A Newbie's Simple Guide
Read More
ICT News- Mar 24, 2026
OpenAI on the Brink: Major Setbacks Signal the Bursting of the AI Bubble
The era of unchecked AI hype appears to be ending, and the bubble is finally bursting.
Features- Mar 24, 2026
How to Use GeForce NOW to Play Video Games Without Actual Hardware
GeForce NOW makes PC gaming accessible to a wider audience by removing the barrier of expensive hardware.