SHA256MediumSignal 51/100
c07a15640065580e3bbff86eb567050e1a9e9847e2034ff00953ce7eeb2eec41
First Seen
Apr 21, 2026
Last Seen
May 9, 2026
Found in 3 reports. Confidence: medium. · Confidence scores are heuristic. Verify before acting on results.
SHA-256 Hash
SHA-256 file hash — primary identifier for malware samples.
MISP Category
Artifacts Dropped
Hash Algorithm
SHA256
Confidence
51%
Signal Score
51 / 100
IDS Rule
No
Threat Context
Tags
MITRE ATT&CK
MITRE ATT&CK TTPs
Feed Intelligence Summary
3 reports51% confidence
3
Source reports
51%
Confidence score
Category tags
browser data exfiltrationbrute forcecredential harvestingcredential stuffingcross-platformcryptocurrencycryptocurrency wallet theftdata store exposureexploitation activityfile-hashidentity & access exploitationindicatorinfostealermacosmalwarephishingresearchedsession hijackingsocial engineeringstealert1005t1027t1027.002t1027.010t1033t1036.005t1041t1056.001t1056.002t1059.001t1059.002t1070.004t1071.001t1074.001t1082t1083t1105t1119t1204.003t1217t1497.001t1539t1552.001t1555t1555.001t1555.003t1560.001t1566t1592.002yara
Activity Timeline
May 9May 9
Threat Activity Heatmap
· Peak: 2026-05-09LessMore
Mon
Wed
Fri
24h
0
Dormant
7d
0
Dormant
30d
0
Dormant
3mo
1
Minimal
Threat ScoreMedium Risk
51
SIGNAL
Signal Score
51%
Confidence
3
Reports
First seenApr 21, 2026
Last seenMay 9, 2026
VirusTotal
Not checked
WHOIS
- description
- A sophisticated ClickFix campaign targets both Windows and macOS users through fake CAPTCHA pages that trick victims into executing malicious commands. The macOS variant deploys an AppleScript-based infostealer that harvests sensitive data including keychain databases, credentials, and session cookies from 12 browsers, over 200 browser extensions, and 16 cryptocurrency wallets. The malware employs a persistent, non-closable dialog box mimicking legitimate system prompts to force victims into providing their system password. Stolen session cookies enable attackers to bypass multi-factor authentication by hijacking active sessions. The campaign uses client-side JavaScript to filter victims by user-agent, directing desktop users to OS-specific payloads while ignoring mobile devices. Latest macOS updates include native terminal security warnings designed to alert users against pasting potentially malicious commands.
- references
- https://www.netskope.com/blog/macos-clickfix-campaign-applescript-stealers-new-terminal-protections, IOCs.2026.csv
Export & API
STIX 2.1 Bundle
CSV Export
Permalink
IOC Journey
mediumFirst detected 2 months ago · Last seen 1 month ago
Appeared in 3 threat reports