Samsung KNOX Takes Some Knocks

Samsung last year touted its enterprise mobile security platform KNOX 2.6 aimed at protecting corporate data as well as the software’s underlying Linux kernel. But a researcher at Black Hat USA next month will demonstrate how he was able to bypass some of the key features in KNOX 2.6, such as data flow integrity (DFI) to keep information flowing to its intended destination, and the Kernel Address Space Layout Randomization (KASLR) that plays a game of cat and mouse with attackers by continually hiding the address location of the kernel.

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