Samsung’s One UI is one of the most widely popular Android skins, and part of the reason is the company’s significant stronghold in the Android ecosystem. While a large user base is in the company’s favor, the South Korean tech giant hasn’t delivered, especially on the software front, the latest example being the mishandling of One UI 7.

On the bright side of things, Samsung’s One UI 8 beta testing program is progressing well so far, with Beta 4 update expected to arrive by the end of this month. Post One UI 8, Samsung will move to the next big Android feature updates, but unlike in the case of One UI 8, those will likely be protected from leaks. This is courtesy of Samsung fixing a vulnerability in its system that allowed the leaks to happen.

You may not see new One UI features ahead of release

New features getting leaked before their official release isn’t something new in the tech space, but in the case of the One UI 8, they came in larger numbers, giving an early glimpse into major upcoming new features. As first reported by SammyGuru, those leaks happened because of a community-made C# tool and apps like CheckFirm, both of which were used to gain access to Samsung’s internal builds.

One UI 7 quick settings on the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra

What’s interesting is that Samsung seemed to be unaware of it until someone named Farlune reported what might have caused the unauthorized access and distribution of One UI 8 test builds. As per the report, the CheckFirm tool made it possible to ‘decrypt metadata or access pre-release firmware,’ following the use of a C# tool to directly interact with Samsung’s OTA servers.

That’s how features like Dynamic Effect in the Gallery app, DeX redesign, enhancements to Secure Folder, and more leaked before Samsung rolled them out to beta testers. While being able to test internal builds seems fun, it poses a significant security threat because those are unpatched software, which may contain security vulnerabilities.

Equally frustrating for Samsung, or any company for that matter, is the breach of confidentiality when things leak out well before their official release. Expectedly, Samsung didn’t waste much time fixing the vulnerability after the security team came to know about it.

Time will tell whether this will be enough to prevent enthusiasts from leaking upcoming OneUI features before Samsung starts beta testing them. But since the company has tightened things up, we might have to settle for less in the lead-up to the upcoming major release after One UI 8.