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A sprawling network of fake shops, all built for one purpose: to steal your payment details and personal data.
The phishing site it is not affiliated with Igloo Inc or Pudgy Penguins, but is designed to lure fans and steal their crypto passwords.
A fake $TEMU crypto airdrop uses the ClickFix trick to make victims run malware themselves and quietly installs a remote-access backdoor.
We found a fake Google Meet update that enrolls the victim's Windows PC in an attacker's device management system.
We uncovered a fake CleanMyMac site delivering SHub Stealer, a macOS infostealer that steals credentials and silently backdoors crypto wallets.
A tampered copy of FileZilla quietly contacts attacker-controlled servers using encrypted DNS traffic that can slip past traditional monitoring.
Disguised as a security check, this fake Google alert uses browser permissions to harvest contacts, location data, and more.
Attackers don’t always need custom malware. Sometimes they just need a trusted brand and a legitimate tool.
A fake Zoom meeting page looks real, triggers a bogus “update,” and silently installs a legitimate commercial monitoring product.
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