News

SparkKitty, a powerful mobile malware strain that scans private photos to steal cryptocurrency recovery phrases and other ...
It's generally not a good idea to keep screenshots of sensitive information on your phone, but you should probably delete ...
Scammers have posed as AI and Web3 startups, spreading crypto-stealing malware through convincing fake websites and social ...
A new report details how the SparkKitty malware can scan photos on both Android and iOS devices, part of an effort to steal cryptocurrency.
Kaspersky warns of SparkKitty malware stealing crypto seed phrases from photos on iOS and Android. Users should avoid unknown apps and APK sideloading.
SparkKitty malware steals crypto seed phrases through compromised apps, with Kaspersky urging users to avoid storing them digitally.
SparkKitty may be an iteration of SparkCat, a photo-scanning malware that was first identified earlier this year but had likely been circulating for some time.
The malware appears to be a successor to SparkCat, a campaign first uncovered in early 2025, which used fake support chat modules to silently access user galleries and exfiltrate sensitive ...
This week, a new malware targeted crypto wallets via photos, CoinMarketCap faced attack, BitoPro blamed Lazarus for heist, ...
Kaspersky says the malware SparkKitty has been around since at least early 2024, and is likely connected to a similar type of malicious software dubbed SparkCat. North Korean threat actors have ...
New SparkKitty malware steals photos from Android and iOS devices by posing as a crypto app, risking exposure of sensitive data like wallet recovery phrases.