Anyone who downloaded CPU-Z or HWMonitor from the official CPUID website in recent days may have received malware instead of ...
Analysis shared by vx-underground says the malicious installer appears to have targeted 64-bit HWMonitor users and included a ...
Links to multiple CPUID tools hijacked and used to drop an infostealer.
The CPUID website was compromised, leading to popular Windows utilities such as CPU-Z and HWMonitor delivering multi-stage, ...
Hackers gained access to an API for the CPUID project and changed the download links on the official website to serve ...
With the links giving you a malware-infected file instead ...
The CPUID website for system analysis tools CPU-Z and HWMonitor was manipulated by attackers. It distributed malware.
Download links were replaced by a Russian-speaking threat actor to distribute a recently emerged malware named STX RAT.
CPUID breach served STX RAT via trojanized CPU-Z downloads on April 9–10, impacting 150+ victims and multiple industries.
A potential software supply-chain incident is unfolding around CPUID, the developer behind CPU-Z and HWMonitor, after ...
The devs were quick to remove the malware, as millions of users rely on these to track temperatures, voltages, fan speeds, ...
If you've downloaded CPU-Z or HWMonitor recently, you might want to double check the files you've used, as they could be infected.