Cybercriminals are using the Lumma information-stealing malware, now updated to track mouse movements with trigonometry to detect if it’s running on a real machine or an antivirus sandbox. Available since Dec 2022, Lumma version 4.0 also uses obfuscation, encrypted strings, dynamic configuration files, and crypto enforcement to evade security software. If it detects non-human like behaviour, it halts yet keeps monitoring for human-like activity.
Hackers Weaponize Old Avast Driver to Install Windows Malware
An old Avast Anti-Rootkit driver is being used to spread “Kill Floor” malware on Windows PCs, according to cybersecurity company Trellix. The malware disables important