Mass email campaign with a pinch of targeted spam
Mass spam mailing posing as customer email delivers the Agent Tesla stealer disguised as a document to corporate users. Continue reading Mass email campaign with a pinch of targeted spam
Collaborate Disseminate
Mass spam mailing posing as customer email delivers the Agent Tesla stealer disguised as a document to corporate users. Continue reading Mass email campaign with a pinch of targeted spam
A malicious bundle containing the RedLine stealer and a miner is distributed on YouTube through cheats and cracks ads for popular games. Continue reading Self-spreading stealer attacks gamers via YouTube
In this report, we analyze malware, potentially unwanted applications and phishing cases related to most popular video games and cheats for these games. Continue reading Good game, well played: an overview of gaming-related cyberthreats in 2022
In this report, you will find statistics and other information about gaming-related malware, phishing schemes and other threats in 2020 and the first half of 2021. Continue reading Gaming-related cyberthreats in 2020 and 2021
In 2019, Kaspersky mobile products and technologies detected 3,503,952 malicious installation packages, 69,777 new mobile banking Trojans and 68,362 new mobile ransomware Trojans. Continue reading Mobile malware evolution 2019
We discovered what appears to be one of AZORult’s most unusual campaigns: abusing the ProtonVPN service and dropping malware via fake ProtonVPN installers for Windows. Continue reading AZORult spreads as a fake ProtonVPN installer
This cybercriminal’s thirst for stolen data is confirmed by the statistics: in the first half of 2019, more than 940,000 users were attacked by malware designed to harvest a variety of data on the computers. The threat’s called “Stealer Trojans” or Password Stealing Ware (PSW), a type of malware designed to steal passwords, files, and other data from victim computers. Continue reading How to steal a million (of your data)
In early March 2019, a number of malicious files detected by our products caught the eye. Although similar to AZORult stealer already known to us, unlike the original malware, they were written not in Delphi, but in C++. Continue reading AZORult++: Rewriting history