Next time you come across a Kindle e-book link somewhere other than Amazon itself, you May want to make sure it’s not some dubious website before you hit download or “Send to Kindle.” A security researcher by the name of Benjamin Daniel Musser has discovered That the “Manage Your Kindle” page contains a security hole – One That hackers can take advantage of with the help of e-books hiding malicious lines of code. Once you load the Kindle Library with a corrupted e-book (Typically with a Subject That includes the & lt; script src = “https://www.example.org/script.js” & gt; & lt; / script & gt;), a hacker gets access to your cookies, and, hence, your Amazon account credentials.
Based on the updates Musser wrote at the bottom of the report’s web page, he first discovered the flaw in October last year. Amazon patched it up Shortly after he reported it,
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