Bitcoin-cloud mining scam
Scammers are pretending to offer users tens of thousands of dollars, supposedly accumulated in an account on an “automated cloud-mining platform”.
20 articles
Scammers are pretending to offer users tens of thousands of dollars, supposedly accumulated in an account on an “automated cloud-mining platform”.
In 2022, cryptocurrency prices fell sharply, but malicious miners are more active than ever.
How fake sellers are stealing bitcoins from buyers of sought-after mining equipment.
Dave and Jeff take a look at Bitcoin mining in Georgia, Fortnite bans, the latest on gaming cheats, and more.
Cybercriminals may use your resources for cryptocurrency mining. How you can prevent it.
Despite the plunge in cryptocurrency values, not only has cryptojacking not declined, it is growing rapidly.
In this edition of the podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss a McDonald’s Monopoly whopper, banning miners, hacking by inmates, and more.
The Rakhni encrypting ransomware, known since 2013, is now trying its hand at mining Monero.
Cybercriminals have realized that infecting servers is much more profitable than mining on home users’ computers.
As we predicted at the end of 2017, malicious cryptomining is booming in 2018, up by 44%.
Originally targeting users from Japan, Korea, and China, Roaming Mantis is quickly spreading worldwide, infecting smartphones through hacked wi-fi routers.
Hidden miners detected in soccer and VPN apps on Google Play — steer clear!
In this podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss Fortnite accounts being compromised, Bitcoin mining in rural America, porn-themed crypto currency and more.
Cybercriminals weaponize hidden mining. We tell you how it works and how to protect your company
In this week’s edition of Kaspersky Lab’s podcast, Jeff and Dave discuss a new LinkedIn scam targeting pensioners, finding love with passwords, and alien hunting.
Cybercriminals attack Telegram users with an old trick for masking malware as pictures.
While you’re watching YouTube, someone might just be using your device to mine cryptocurrency.
Hacked programs freely distributed online are found to be equipped with a hidden NiceHash cryptocurrency miner.
What 2017 will be remembered for, which of our experts’ predictions came true, and what they think about the future
Fraudsters make a fortune mining cryptocurrencies — on your computer, at your expense, and without your knowledge.