Pwn2Own Toronto 2022, Hackers Earn big for 63 unique zero-day exploits

Share post:

Participants in the Pwn2Own Toronto 2022 hacking competition earned $400,000 on the first day, and a total of $989,750 on the final day for new exploits targeting phones, printers, routers, and NAS devices.

26 teams and security researchers targeted devices in the categories of mobile phones, home automation hubs, printers, wireless routers, network-attached storage, and smart speakers during this hacking competition, all of which were up to date and in their default configuration.

On their third attempt, the STAR Labs team was the first to exploit a zero-day in Samsung’s flagship device by executing an improper input validation attack, earning $50,000 and 5 Master of Pwn points.

On the first day of the competition, another contestant known as Chim demonstrated another successful exploit targeting the Samsung Galaxy S22. On the second and third days of the competition, security researchers from Interrupt Labs and Pentest Limited also hacked the Galaxy S22, with Pentest Limited demonstrating their zero-day exploit in just 55 seconds.

The Devcore team, which had previously competed in several Pwn2Own contests, received the highest single reward on the first day. They were paid $100,000 for hacking a MikroTik router and a Canon printer connected to it.

The event totals $989,750, 63 unique 0-days, 66 entries, and 36 different teams representing 14+ countries.

The sources for this piece include an article in BleepingComputer.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

Cyber Security Today, May 3, 2024 – North Korea exploits weak email DMARC settings, and the latest Verizon analysis of thousands of data breaches

This episode reports on warnings about threats from China, Russia and North Korea, the hack of Dropbox Sign's infrastructure

Hashtag Trending for World Password Day, Thursday, May 2nd, 2024

Security firm Okta warns of an unprecendented password stuffing attack that is piggybacking on regular user’s mobile and...

Google Chrome’s new post-quantum cryptography causes connection issues

The latest update to Google Chrome, version 124, which integrates a new quantum-resistant encryption mechanism, has led to...

UK legislation bans weak passwords

Starting Monday, the UK will enforce new laws banning the sale of devices with weak default passwords such...

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways