Unlike modern malicious software that requires internet permissions and complex payloads, Super Bluetooth Hack 1.08 leveraged and Bluesnarfing vulnerabilities. The application gave the user a graphical interface to execute unauthorized commands on a target phone—provided the target phone was in "discoverable" mode and the attacker had the pairing PIN (usually defaulted to "0000" or "1234") or exploited a pairing bypass.
Modern phones use LE (Low Energy) Secure Connections with Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key exchange. Man-in-the-middle attacks are cryptographically impossible in standard pairing.
file that promised total control over any phone within a ten-meter radius.