Fake 7-Zip downloads are turning home PCs into proxy nodes (www.malwarebytes.com)
from Zerush@lemmy.ml to security@lemmy.ml on 10 Feb 13:45
https://lemmy.ml/post/42962353

#security

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WagnasT@piefed.world on 10 Feb 15:41 next collapse

So the threat actors squatted on a similar domain name and sent malicious 7zip installers. namecheap is the registrar for the offending domain, abuse@namecheap.com is the appropriate place to report this crap.

onlooker@lemmy.ml on 10 Feb 16:55 next collapse

Following a YouTube tutorial for a new build, they were instructed to download 7‑Zip from 7zip[.]com, unaware that the legitimate project is hosted exclusively at 7-zip.org.

My heart goes out to the poor, unsuspecting new PC owner and at the same time: fuck YouTube tutorials. It’s basically Russian roulette: either the information is solid or you get shit like this. YouTube doesn’t vet videos, nor does it have any interest in doing so, unless profits are somehow involved.

Sphere@hexbear.net on 10 Feb 17:09 collapse

This is why ninite.com is and will always be the correct way to install basic software on a fresh PC

Luffy879@lemmy.ml on 10 Feb 17:27 next collapse

Correction: your central repository (or winget if you’re a win snob

Sphere@hexbear.net on 10 Feb 17:30 collapse

Yes, go ahead and keep telling ordinary people to use a terminal, I’m sure they’ll come around any day now…

Zerush@lemmy.ml on 11 Feb 12:01 collapse

I never download apps from other than the official homepage or from sites linked from these. This case is by download 7-Zip from a fake homepage, not from the real one. This can happen when you use a third party download page, even if Ninite is normally a trustworth site.