CoffeeLoader Malware Is Stacked With Viscous Evasion Tricks
Next-level malware represents a new era of malicious code developed specifically to get around modern security software like digital forensics tools and EDR, new research warns.
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Next-level malware represents a new era of malicious code developed specifically to get around modern security software like digital forensics tools and EDR, new research warns.
Malware writing is only one of the several malicious activities that adversaries can use the new, uncensored generative AI chatbot.
Researchers have uncovered one of the first examples of threat actors using artificial intelligence chatbots for malware creation, in a phishing attack spreading the open-source remote access trojan.
The ClearFake campaign uses fake browser updates to lure victims and spread RedLine, Amadey, and Lumma stealers.
Attackers could exploit a common AI experience—false recommendations—to spread malicious code via developers that use ChatGPT to create software.
The powerful AI bot can produce malware without malicious code, making it tough to mitigate.
The AI-based chatbot is allowing bad actors with absolutely no coding experience to develop malware.
The discovery adds to the growing list of recent incidents where threat actors have used public code repositories to distribute malware in software supply chain attacks.
Microsoft reveals now-fixed flaw in Apple's App Sandbox controls could allow attackers to escalate device privileges and deploy malware.
The malware’s abuse of PowerShell makes it more dangerous, allowing for more advanced attacks such as ransomware, fileless malware, and malicious code memory injections.