ClickFix on Macs is evolving yet again and is no longer abusing Terminal.
The new DeepLoad malware has been distributed in ClickFix attacks to steal user credentials and install a rogue browser ...
A new info-stealing malware named Infinity Stealer is targeting macOS systems with a Python payload packaged as an executable using the open-source Nuitka compiler.
ClickFix attacks targeting Mac users now use Script Editor instead of Terminal, a shift that sidesteps Apple's latest ...
OS 26.4 update introduced security warnings into Terminal to prevent ClickFix attacks, so attackers have shifted to Script ...
Apple’s macOS 26.4 update adds a Terminal warning to help stop ClickFix-style attacks by flagging potentially harmful pasted ...
A new campaign delivering the Atomic Stealer malware to macOS users abuses the Script Editor in a variation of the ClickFix ...
A newly uncovered malware campaign is combining ClickFix delivery with AI generated evasion techniques to steal enterprise user accounts and passwords. The attacks are designed to provide intruders ...
A newly discovered attack sandbags Apple users into hacking themselves. Here’s what all Mac users need to know.
A new ClickFix attack that leverages a Nuitka loader targets macOS users with the Python-based Infiniti Stealer malware.
This is a popular malware variant usually sold as a service on cybercrime forums. It is designed to exfiltrate sensitive data from target Windows computers, such as browser credentials, session ...