Frightened Of The Stagefright Vulnerability? Companies Are Rolling Out Patches By Staff Reporter | Aug 18, 2015 09:26 PM EDT Remember the Stagefright exploit that was brought to Android usersâ consciousness just recently? Verizon, as well as some OEMâs, are now pushing updates for some of the units in their portfolio. Verizon was reported to have pushed patches for the Google Nexus 7. Meanwhile, here are some of the Android device makers who have created fixes for the Stagefright vulnerability: -Google released system images containing the patch for the models: Nexus 4, Nexus 5, Nexus 6, Nexus 7, Nexus 9, and Nexus 10. Monthly security updates will also be released for the Nexus line. -Motorolaâs models ranging from Moto E to the newest Moto X, were given the patch. According to Android Central, all models released between these aforementioned models will receive the patch as well. Motorola has sent out these patches to US carriers around August 10th. -HTC has announced that all their over the air and security updates will contain fixes for the Stagefright vulnerability starting August. -Cyanogen announced that their stripped-down ROMs have been patched, starting with CM12.0. The 12.1 ânightliesâ or beta versions will also contain the patch. Their older ROMs have also been patched. They made the announcement on their Google Plus account on July 28th. Google has also patched its Hangouts and Messenger apps. With this new update describing how Google is working with the OEMâs and the telco carriers on mitigating the Stagefright vulnerability, hopefully users wonât be affected by the security loophole. Meanwhile, it would be good to remember that most security vulnerabilities get to wreak havoc with the userâs personal device habits. So to ensure that the Stagefright vulnerability wonât be an active inconvenience for you, either disable your MMS if you donât use it anyway, or never open MMS attachments, if you werenât expecting files anyway. With media-rich communication and messaging apps, filesharing apps, and even multimedia attachments for email, it would be a wonder why youâd still use MMS anyway. The Stagefright exploit was discovered by Zimperium, a mobile security firm. Zimperium is the company behind enterprise security solutions zIPS, zCONSOLE and zANTI. Zimperium has headquarters in Tel Aviv, Israel, as well as San Francisco, California, USA.