All news with #amos tag
Wed, December 10, 2025
Google Ads Lead to ChatGPT/Grok Guides Installing AMOS
⚠️ Security researchers warn of a macOS infostealer campaign that uses Google search ads to push users toward publicly shared ChatGPT and Grok conversations containing malicious installation instructions. According to Kaspersky and Huntress, the ClickFix attack spoofs troubleshooting guides and decodes a base64 payload into a bash script that prompts for a password, then uses it to install the AMOS infostealer with root privileges. Users are urged not to execute commands copied from online chats and to verify safety first.
Tue, December 9, 2025
AMOS infostealer uses ChatGPT share to spread macOS malware
🛡️Kaspersky researchers uncovered a macOS campaign in which attackers used paid search ads to point victims to a public shared chat on ChatGPT that contained a fake installation guide for an “Atlas” browser. The guide instructs users to paste a single Terminal command that downloads a script from atlas-extension.com and requests system credentials. Executing it deploys the AMOS infostealer and a persistent backdoor that exfiltrates browser data, crypto wallets and files. Users should not run unsolicited commands and must use updated anti‑malware and careful verification before following online guides.
Sat, October 18, 2025
Google Ads Promote Fake Homebrew, LogMeIn, TradingView Sites
🚨 Researchers uncovered a malvertising campaign that uses Google Ads to surface convincing fake Homebrew, LogMeIn, and TradingView download sites targeting macOS developers. The pages prompt victims to copy a curl command into Terminal, but the clipboard often contains a base64-encoded installer that decodes and runs an install.sh payload. That script removes quarantine flags, bypasses Gatekeeper, and delivers infostealers that check for analysis environments before executing. Operators deploy AMOS and Odyssey, which harvest browsers, wallets, and credentials; users are urged not to paste unknown commands into Terminal.
Mon, September 22, 2025
Fake macOS apps on GitHub spread Atomic (AMOS) malware
⚠️ LastPass warns of a macOS campaign that uses fraudulent GitHub repositories to impersonate popular apps and trick users into running Terminal commands. The fake installers deliver the Atomic (AMOS) info‑stealer via a ClickFix workflow: a curl command decodes a base64 URL and downloads an install.sh payload to /tmp. Attackers rely on SEO and many disposable accounts to evade takedowns and boost search rankings. Users should only install macOS software from official vendor sites and avoid pasting unknown commands into Terminal.