An Empirical Study on Android-related Vulnerabilities

April 11, 2017 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE Working Conference on Mining Software Repositories

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Authors Mario Linares-Vasquez, Gabriele Bavota, Camilo Escobar-Velasquez arXiv ID 1704.03356 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Cross-listed cs.CR Citations 73 Venue IEEE Working Conference on Mining Software Repositories Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Mobile devices are used more and more in everyday life. They are our cameras, wallets, and keys. Basically, they embed most of our private information in our pocket. For this and other reasons, mobile devices, and in particular the software that runs on them, are considered first-class citizens in the software-vulnerabilities landscape. Several studies investigated the software-vulnerabilities phenomenon in the context of mobile apps and, more in general, mobile devices. Most of these studies focused on vulnerabilities that could affect mobile apps, while just few investigated vulnerabilities affecting the underlying platform on which mobile apps run: the Operating System (OS). Also, these studies have been run on a very limited set of vulnerabilities. In this paper we present the largest study at date investigating Android-related vulnerabilities, with a specific focus on the ones affecting the Android OS. In particular, we (i) define a detailed taxonomy of the types of Android-related vulnerability; (ii) investigate the layers and subsystems from the Android OS affected by vulnerabilities; and (iii) study the survivability of vulnerabilities (i.e., the number of days between the vulnerability introduction and its fixing). Our findings could help OS and apps developers in focusing their verification & validation activities, and researchers in building vulnerability detection tools tailored for the mobile world.
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