Unity has patched a vulnerability discovered in June that allowed malicious code execution in Android games, which could be used to target crypto users. Unity Technology has deployed a fix for a vulnerability that allowed third-party code to run in Android-based mobile games, which some experts warned last week could be a risk to crypto users. Unity said on Friday that the security patches were rolled to fix a vulnerability in its gaming engine that was discovered in June.The director of community of Unity Technologies, Larry “Major Nelson” Hryb, posted a security update advisory explaining that the vulnerability could allow local code execution and “access to confidential information on end-user devices running Unity-built applications.”Read more Unity has patched a vulnerability discovered in June that allowed malicious code execution in Android games, which could be used to target crypto users. Unity Technology has deployed a fix for a vulnerability that allowed third-party code to run in Android-based mobile games, which some experts warned last week could be a risk to crypto users. Unity said on Friday that the security patches were rolled to fix a vulnerability in its gaming engine that was discovered in June.The director of community of Unity Technologies, Larry “Major Nelson” Hryb, posted a security update advisory explaining that the vulnerability could allow local code execution and “access to confidential information on end-user devices running Unity-built applications.”Read more

Unity patches Android mobile bug, says no evidence of exploit

2025/10/06 13:42

Unity has patched a vulnerability discovered in June that allowed malicious code execution in Android games, which could be used to target crypto users.

Unity Technology has deployed a fix for a vulnerability that allowed third-party code to run in Android-based mobile games, which some experts warned last week could be a risk to crypto users.

Unity said on Friday that the security patches were rolled to fix a vulnerability in its gaming engine that was discovered in June.

The director of community of Unity Technologies, Larry “Major Nelson” Hryb, posted a security update advisory explaining that the vulnerability could allow local code execution and “access to confidential information on end-user devices running Unity-built applications.”

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