Another wave of malicious browser extensions capable of tracking user activity have been found across Chrome, Firefox, and Edge. Some of them may have been active for up to five years.
The post New AI-Powered Malware Uses Android Devices for Ad Fraud appeared first on Android Headlines.
North Korean hackers hit 3,136 IPs using fake job interviews to deploy malware via coding tests on LinkedIn, targeting crypto and AI firms.
In 2026, weaponised artificial intelligence will redefine conflict in cyberspace, according to predictions from Australian ...
Once trust is granted to the repository's author, a malicious app executes arbitrary commands on the victim's system with no ...
A new family of Android click-fraud trojans leverages TensorFlow machine learning models to automatically detect and interact ...
Just yesterday, we noted the growing threat of ransomware. Now, Jamf Threat Labs is warning that North Korean threat actors ...
As part of the infamous Contagious Interview campaign, North Korean threat actors were seen abusing legitimate Microsoft ...
Attackers are increasingly abandoning noisy, direct attacks in favor of more subtle, stealthy tactics. They are flying under the radar and achieving long dwell times with the aid of more modular ...
North Korean hackers target macOS developers with malware hidden in Visual Studio Code task configuration files.
Threat actors behind the campaign are abusing Microsoft Visual Studio Code’s trusted workflows to execute and persist ...
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