RedHook abuses Android’s Wireless Debugging feature to gain powerful shell-level access without a computer. The malware can watch your screen, capture keystrokes, steal data and control apps remotely.
Simple Guide 1. Use the Built-in Battery Health Tool (Android 15+) Starting with Android 14, Google introduced a na ...
Threat actors have brought back the RedHook malware, which first appeared in 2025, but now has new tricks up its sleeve.
A new version of RedHook Android malware uses your phone's own built-in debugging tool to take remote control of your device without needing root access or a USB cable.
Researchers have uncovered an updated RedHook malware that can gain shell privileges by tricking users into giving ...
A new version of the RedHook Android malware abuses the Android Wireless Debugging (Wireless ADB) mechanism in a novel way to ...
Shizuku is a game-changer for tinkering lovers ...
Building directly for Android beats creating web apps by a mile.
If you’ve been programming in other Android environments, you already know how typical debugging works: your app runs on a phone, and your IDE runs on a computer. The two talk to each other over a USB ...
A new system service to check if an app is registered to a verified developer will be rolled out this month. Google announced its Android ...
An image of Android's wireless debugging settings page on a Pixel phone. Original photo by Ryan Haines. Gemini Nano Banana Pro was used to place the screenshot onto the screen. Launched with Android ...