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Latest coverage for Keylogger

Keyloggers record keystrokes to steal passwords, messages, and other sensitive data, making them a serious risk to account security and privacy.

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Keylogger is software, firmware, or a physical device that records keyboard input, often covertly, and stores or transmits it to another party. In security reporting, the term usually means an unauthorized surveillance or credential-theft tool, although legitimate monitoring tools can use similar techniques with authorization. Captured text may include passwords, recovery codes, messages, and sensitive business data.

Keyloggers matter because they target the endpoint and input process: malware may be installed through phishing or malicious software, while hardware versions require physical access. They may expose passwords or one-time codes entered on an infected device. Defenses include endpoint monitoring, application control, least privilege, timely patching, and inspection of unfamiliar USB or keyboard hardware. If suspected, isolate the device, preserve evidence, reset credentials from a clean device, revoke sessions or tokens, and assess what information was entered.

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Bank Info Security 2 years, 4 months ago

Hackers Hiding Keylogger, RAT Malware in SVG Image Files

New Campaign Evades Security Tools to Deliver Agent Tesla Keylogger and XWorm RATThreat actors are using image files or Scalable Vector Graphics files to deliver ransomware, download banking Trojans or distribute malware. The campaign uses an open-source tool, AutoSmuggle, to facilitate the delivery of malicious files through SVG or HTML files.