Malware Activity
How Modern Cybercriminals Are Blending Social Engineering with Advanced Malware to Expand Financial Attacks
Recent threat activity shows a clear shift in how cybercriminals are targeting organizations and individuals, combining highly convincing social engineering with increasingly advanced malware across multiple platforms. A group known as JINX‑0164 is focusing on cryptocurrency companies by impersonating recruiters and luring developers into fake meetings, where victims unknowingly install macOS malware that steals credentials, wallet data, and access to collaboration tools. Once inside, attackers move deeper into development environments and even manipulate code pipelines, sometimes escalating into supply chain attacks that spread infections further. At the same time, separate campaigns involving Grandoreiro and BTMOB are targeting financial institutions and users in Latin America and Europe, using phishing emails and fake applications to infect both Windows and Android devices. Grandoreiro focuses on stealing banking credentials through sophisticated evasion techniques, while BTMOB enables attackers to gain remote control over mobile devices and access sensitive data. Together, these campaigns highlight how financially motivated actors are expanding their reach by targeting multiple entry points, including employees, devices, and software ecosystems, while blending human manipulation with technical precision to drive larger and more scalable cyberattacks. CTIX analysts will continue to report on the latest malware strains and attack methodologies.
- TheHackerNews: JINX-0164 Targets Cryptocurrency Firms with Fake Recruiter Lures and macOS Malware article
- TheHackerNews: Grandoreiro Malware and BTMOB RAT Campaigns Target Windows and Android Users article
Threat Actor Activity
MuddyWater Global Espionage Campaign with New Attack Techniques and Upgrades
The Iranian state-linked group MuddyWater has launched a new espionage campaign impacting at least nine (9) organizations across nine (9) countries and four (4) continents in early 2026. Targets include a major South Korean electronics manufacturer, a Middle Eastern international airport, Southeast Asian industrial firms, and a Latin American financial-services provider, as well as education and public-sector bodies. The attackers rely heavily on DLL sideloading with legitimately signed Fortemedia (fmapp.exe) and SentinelOne (sentinelmemoryscanner.exe) binaries to execute malicious DLLs (fmapp.dll and sentinelagentcore.dll) while appearing benign. These DLLs embed the open-source ChromElevator tool to steal passwords, cookies, and payment card data from Chromium-based browsers, bypassing App-Bound Encryption protections. MuddyWater also uses a Node.js–to–PowerShell implant chain to perform reconnaissance, screenshot capture, SAM hive theft, privilege escalation, SOCKS5 reverse-proxy tunneling, and staging of stolen data on public file-transfer services like
Vulnerabilities
CISA Orders Emergency Patching for Actively Exploited LiteSpeed cPanel Root-Level Vulnerability
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has issued an urgent directive mandating affected agencies to remediate a critical LiteSpeed cPanel User-End Plugin vulnerability that is actively being exploited in the wild and has now been added to the agency’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog. The flaw, tracked as
- Bleeping Computer: CVE-2026-48172 Article
- Security Affairs: CVE-2026-48172 Article
- CISA: CVE-2026-48172Advisory
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