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Malwarebytes

Carnival confirms data breach impacting nearly 6 million Kali365 phishing kit bypasses MFA and steals Microsoft logins Company bragged phone mics could listen to conversations. They couldn’t. Fake LinkedIn emails abuse Adobe to track victims Fake software on GitHub and SourceForge distribute Deno RAT 700+ education and tech websites hijacked in huge ClickFix malware campaign Scammers pretending to be Microsoft had help from US executives A week in security (May 18 – May 24) Update Chrome now: Critical bugs could let attackers run code Microsoft Defender vulnerabilities are being exploited in the wild TikTok, YouTube, and Roblox face scrutiny, but age gates won’t fix child safety Catch spyware in the act with Windows Webcam Monitoring Researchers left AI agents alone in a virtual town and watched it all unravel Fake malware-signing service Fox Tempest dismantled by Microsoft Firefox 151 packs big privacy upgrades into a small update Biometrics, diagnoses, and bank details exposed in major healthcare breach Facebook scam promises cheap Aldi meat boxes, steals payment info instead YouTube wants your face to fight deepfakes Microsoft is changing Edge’s plaintext password behavior A week in security (May 11 – May 17) AI is distorting the Holocaust (Lock and Code S07E10) Attackers replaced JDownloader installer downloads with malware Meta’s confusing new approach to chat privacy Why Malwarebytes blocks some Yahoo Mail redirects Deepfake sextortion forces schools to remove student photos from websites Texas sued Netflix over claims it secretly collected and sold users’ data May 2026 Patch Tuesday: no zero-days but plenty to fix Fake Claude search results lure Mac users into ClickFix attack 1 in 8 employees have sold company logins or know someone who has Stolen Canvas data was “returned” after hacker agreement, Instructure says Yarbo responds to robot flaws that could mow down their owners A week in security (May 4 – May 10) Microsoft says Edge’s plaintext password behavior is “by design” ShinyHunters escalates Canvas attacks with school login defacements Massive AI investment scam network spans 15,500 domains If a fake moustache can fool age checks, is the Online Safety Act working? 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They just don’t (Lock and Code S07E08) Mythos: An AI tool too powerful for public release A week in security (April 13 – April 19) This old-school scam is still working “Your shipment has arrived” email hides remote access software Browser Guard gets even better with Access Control “iCloud storage is full” scam is back, and now it wants your payment details A fake Slack download is giving attackers a hidden desktop on your machine Booking.com breach gives scammers what they need to target guests AI clickbait can turn your notifications into a scam feed Fake YouTube copyright notices can steal your Google login From fake Proton VPN sites to gaming mods, this Windows infostealer is everywhere April Patch Tuesday fixes two zero-days, including one under active attack Credit Resources Vault: Why this credit email set off our scam alarms Omnistealer uses the blockchain to steal everything it can ChatGPT under scrutiny as Florida investigates campus shooting Simply opening a PDF could trigger this Adobe Reader zero-day A week in security (April 6 – April 12) Fake Claude site installs malware that gives attackers access to your computer ClickFix finds a new way to infect Macs Scammers pose as Amazon support to steal your account NSFW app leak exposes 70,000 prompts linked to individual users 30,000 private Facebook images allegedly downloaded by Meta employee This fake Windows support website delivers password-stealing malware Your extensions leak clues about you, so we made sure Browser Guard doesn’t Russian hacking group targets home and small office routers to spy on users Timeshare owners warned to watch out for cartel-linked scams Traffic violation scams swap links for QR codes to steal your card details Support platform breach exposes Hims & Hers customer data A week in security (March 30 – April 5) Killer robots are here. Now what? (Lock and Code S07E07) That dream job offer from Coca-Cola or Ferrari? It’s a trap for your passwords Blocking children from social media is a badly executed good idea Apple expands “DarkSword” patches to iOS 18.7.7 Malwarebytes Privacy VPN receives full third-party audit Wikipedia’s AI agent row likely just the beginning of the bot-ocalypse Why we’re still not doing April Fools’ Day
WhatsApp on Windows users targeted in new campaign, warns Microsoft
2026-04-01 · via Malwarebytes

Microsoft researchers found a campaign that abuses WhatsApp attachments to sneak a script onto Windows machines which will lead to the attacker gaining remote control.

WhatsApp offers a desktop application for Windows and macOS, which users can synchronize with their mobile devices. Desktop versions of WhatsApp are generally used as extensions of mobile apps rather than primary platforms. So, while wide usage of these apps exists, their adoption rate is likely significantly lower when compared to mobile platforms.

Last year, we wrote about Meta closing a vulnerability that allowed an attacker to run arbitrary code on a Windows system which existed in all WhatsApp versions before 2.2450.6.

The attacks found by Microsoft however are based solely on social engineering. The target receives a WhatsApp attachment that looks harmless enough, but it is actually a .vbs (Visual Basic Script) file that Windows can execute.

If the attacker manages to convince the victim to run the file on Windows, the script copies built‑in Windows tools into a hidden folder and gives them misleading names so they look harmless at first glance.

And the tools themselves are legitimate ones, but they’re abused to download malware. A classic living off the land (LOTL) technique which uses what’s already on the system instead of introducing malware binaries that would get picked up in a scan.

The next scripts are pulled from popular cloud providers, so network traffic looks like normal access to AWS, Tencent Cloud, or Backblaze instead of some shady server that would raise red flags.

To turn off other possible alarms, the malware keeps trying to elevate itself to administrator, then tweaks UAC (User Account Control) prompts and registry settings so it can silently make system‑level changes and persist across reboots.

At the end of the infection chain, an unsigned MSI (Microsoft Installer) sets up remote‑access software and other payloads, giving the attacker ongoing, hands‑on access to the machine and data.

How to stay safe

For home users and small businesses, there are some practical steps to stay safe:

  • Do not open unsolicited attachments until you have verified with a trusted source that they are safe.
  • Turn on View File name extensions in Explorer so that a file claiming to be picture but ending in .vbs or .msi can be identified as such.
  • Use an up-to-date real-time anti-malware solution to stop unwanted connections and identify malicious files.
  • Download software only from the vendor’s official site and check that installers are signed.
  • Don’t ignore warning signs. Unexpected UAC prompts, new software suddenly appearing, or your machine becoming sluggish after opening a WhatsApp attachment are all reasons for an anti-malware scan and, if needed, be prepared to restore from a clean backup.
  • Keep Windows and all other applications current to prevent from exploiting known vulnerabilities.

We don’t just report on threats—we remove them

Cybersecurity risks should never spread beyond a headline. Keep threats off your devices by downloading Malwarebytes today.

About the author

Was a Microsoft MVP in consumer security for 12 years running. Can speak four languages. Smells of rich mahogany and leather-bound books.