ClickLock Stealer kills macOS apps every 210 milliseconds until victims enter a password, then steals browser credentials, cookies, wallets, and Keych

CrashStealer uses a notarized macOS dropper to pass Gatekeeper, then steals browser, wallet, password manager, file, and keychain data.

A new macOS information-stealing malware called CrashStealer pretends to be Apple's crash-reporting tool to steal credentials, keychain data, and crypto wallets.

This Apple credential theft attack targeted your macOS login password while bypassing the built-in malware protection. Here’s what you need to know about CrashStealer.

Disguised as Apple's CrashReporter, CrashStealer steals passwords, browser data, crypto wallets, and other sensitive information.

ClickLock Stealer kills macOS apps every 210 milliseconds until victims enter a password, then steals browser credentials, cookies, wallets, and Keych

A new macOS malware named ClickLock Stealer leverages social engineering and process killing to bypass the operating system’s protections.

Newly documented stealer ClickLock comes for the more trusting Mac user with spot of social engineering

A new macOS information-stealing malware dubbed ClickLock terminates all visible processes to force users into entering their system login password.

Momentan kursiert ein neuer Mac-Datenschädling, der Zugangsdaten und Kryptowährungen klauen kann. Er tarnt sich als Apple-Software.