WARPTECHNEWS · LAB
HomeAIBusinessTechArchive
WARPTECH LAB NEWS

Warptech Lab News aggrega le notizie più rilevanti da oltre 700 fonti internazionali, con classificazione AI, TL;DR sintetici e timeline cluster su singole storie.

Navigazione

  • Home
  • Archivio
  • Editor's Brief
  • Cerca
  • Il tuo account
  • Newsletter tech/AI

Informazioni legali

  • Privacy Policy
  • Termini di servizio
  • Cookie Policy

© 2026 Sparktech S.R.L. — Tutti i diritti riservati. Sito gestito e manutenuto da Sparktech S.R.L.

Sede legale: Corso Libertà 55, 13100 Vercelli (VC), Italia · P.IVA / C.F. 02835910023 · Contatti: admin@warptechlab.com

Home
Storia in 2 fonti

Hackers hijack thousands of sites for ClickFix and FakeUpdate attacks

A threat actor tracked as DriveSurge has been operating large-scale malware distribution campaigns using ClickFix and FakeUpdates techniques on compromised sites.

Raccontata dableepingcomputer.comdarkreading.com

Confronto fonti

2 prospettive sulla stessa storia
AI · summaries
bleepingcomputer.comStai leggendo3 g fa

Hackers hijack thousands of sites for ClickFix and FakeUpdate attacks

DriveSurge compromette migliaia di siti web per reindirizzare visitatori verso ClickFix/FakeUpdates malware (80+ injection domains). Risk supply-chain; serve training su app-menu updates e blocco comandi sospetti, cross-platform.

originale
darkreading.com2 g fa

DriveSurge Hijacks Thousands of Sites for ClickFix, FakeUpdate

A sneaky IAB operation uses a malicious traffic distribution system (TDS) to redirect visitors of trusted websites to ones that deliver malware.

Leggi questa versione → originale

Timeline cronologica

  1. martedì 2 giugno 2026·bleepingcomputer.com

    Hackers hijack thousands of sites for ClickFix and FakeUpdate attacks

    A threat actor tracked as DriveSurge has been operating large-scale malware distribution campaigns using ClickFix and FakeUpdates techniques on compromised sites.

  2. martedì 2 giugno 2026·darkreading.com

    DriveSurge Hijacks Thousands of Sites for ClickFix, FakeUpdate

    A sneaky IAB operation uses a malicious traffic distribution system (TDS) to redirect visitors of trusted websites to ones that deliver malware.