A new ClickFix attack variant uses fake CAPTCHA pages instructing victims to paste and execute malicious commands in Windows Terminal.
Tech expert ThioJoe exposes the dangerous ClickFix scam tricking thousands of PC users.
A woman shared the "Clickfix" scheme that tried to infect her computer in a viral social-media post.
Three distinct campaigns were recently spotted, all targeting MacOS users with infostealers.
A fake $TEMU crypto airdrop uses the ClickFix trick to make victims run malware themselves and quietly installs a remote-access backdoor.
New ClickFix variant maps WebDAV drive to run trojanized WorkFlowy app, enabling stealth C2 beacon and payload delivery.
Unwitting victims are now being tricked into installing malware via Windows Terminal, but some experts say this is old news.
Hackers have a new tool called ClickFix. The new attack vector combines fake human-verification prompts with malware, trying to trick users into running Terminal commands that bypass macOS security.
Over 250 legitimate websites, including news outlets and a US Senate candidate’s official webpage, been compromised to infect visitors with infostealers, warn Rapid7 researchers ...
Crooks tweak familiar copy-paste ruse so that victims run malicious commands themselves A new twist on the long-running ...
Crypto criminals are refining social engineering tactics to bypass traditional security tools, using fake venture capital outreach to deploy a technique known as ClickFix.
The cyberattacks blend malvertising with a ClickFix-style technique that highlights risky behavior with AI coding assistants and command-line interfaces.