Cybercriminals Use Fake CrowdStrike Job Offers to Distribute Cryptominer
CrowdStrike warned it had observed a phishing campaign impersonating the firm’s recruitment process to lure victims into downloading cryptominer
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Background for this topic.
Cryptomining software uses computing power to validate cryptocurrency transactions and earn digital coins. When deployed maliciously, cryptomining malware hijacks devices without user consent, exploiting CPU or GPU resources to generate cryptocurrency for attackers. This unauthorized use can affect endpoints, servers, cloud instances, and IoT devices, often spreading through compromised software or exposed services.
From a security perspective, cryptomining malware can degrade system performance, increase power consumption, and cause hardware stress or overheating. Detection relies on monitoring unusual resource usage and network traffic linked to mining pools. Mitigation includes patching vulnerabilities, restricting execution of unauthorized binaries, and applying endpoint protection that identifies mining behaviors. Understanding cryptominer activity helps prioritize incident response and resource allocation in affected environments.
CrowdStrike warned it had observed a phishing campaign impersonating the firm’s recruitment process to lure victims into downloading cryptominer
Cybersecurity company CrowdStrike is alerting of a phishing campaign that exploits its own branding to distribute a cryptocurrency miner that's disguised as an employee CRM application as part of a supposed recruitment process
CrowdStrike is warning that a phishing campaign is impersonating the cybersecurity company in fake job offer emails to trick targets into infecting themselves with a Monero cryptocurrency miner (XMRig). [...]