
Asus was recently a claimed target of a ransomware group called Everest, which said it had managed to get hold of the hardware manufacturer’s phones’ “camera source code.” Asus, however, is saying the group has hacked one of its suppliers, not Asus itself.
The company says: “An Asus supplier was hacked. This affected some of the camera source code for Asus phones. This incident has not impacted Asus products, internal company systems, or user privacy. Asus continues to strengthen supply chain security in compliance with cybersecurity standards.”

This incident isn’t far off the back of Asus releasing updates to fix security flaws—some “high” severity, and one “critical”—for some routers and the MyAsus software. But these things happen all the time, I suppose, and Asus products a far from the only ones to have been found vulnerable to exploits.
The important thing is that these exploits are patched, which serves as a reminder, of course, to keep all your software up-to-date.
Sometimes, however, there are things that can’t be fixed by a simple software update. I’m reminded of the flawed UEFIs that were discovered to have shipped with some Framework Linux machines. Firmware’s something that can’t usually be fixed with a simple in-OS update.
Nor, presumably, are problems generated from leaked source code for a phone camera. Hopefully, Asus is right, and this breach hasn’t impacted its products, internal systems, or user privacy. Especially the last point.

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