Top Malware That Will Potentially Attack Your Mac Devices In 2019
Anil
Mac devices will have to come under attack relentlessly this year.
- Your Mac's Mouse Disappears, How To Get It Back
- UK Startup Develops The First Antimicrobial Smartphone In The World
- After 6 Months Of Waiting, Big Sur Is Finally Here, Available Starting November 12
OSX.Dok
OSX.Dok was first discovered in 2017, and macOS users had to see it back a few months ago - with a new variant. According to Sentinel One, the recent presence of OSX.Dok is packaged with more sophisticated maneuvers relative to both other malware and its previous version. By triggering a hidden version of Tor, OSX.DOK actually uses a proxy server to redirect the victim’s traffic, making it accessible to cybercriminals and malicious third parties behind this Trojan.
CookieMiner
CookieMiner is designed to attack Mac computers for crypto mining purposes. It will trick the system to stealth data related to cryptocurrency transactions as well as Google Chrome credentials.
By making use of a Monero miner tool alongside backdoor and other threatening tools, CookieMiner puts our virtual coins and wallets under the fire.
Lazarus
The North Korea-connected hacker group Lazarus represents a high risk to Mac users because of many serious attacks. A vast number of victim includes businesses and cryptocurrency exchanges were spotted not only on MacOS but also Windows computers.
As for the method, Lazarus is said to spread out a backdoor coming with untrustful Microsoft Word documents in tow.
Pirrit
Pirrit is a combination form of browser hijacking malware and adware, which aims to display as much as possible the number of ads leading to scamming third-party sites. Security researchers have found it in early 2018 for the first time, but now it's likely to come with an epidemic. It was spotted as a new strain of Mac machines as most of the antivirus services somehow were not able to detect and wipe out, even though a number of related samples were found on Virus Total before.
OSX.Siggen
OSX.Siggen infects hazardous codes to macOS devices then add them to botnets through a backdoor through the impersonation of a WhatsApp application. Notably, those backdoors were found under the name Mac.BackDoor.Siggen.20 by DoctorWeb's researchers last month.
Featured Stories
ICT News - Mar 24, 2026
OpenAI on the Brink: Major Setbacks Signal the Bursting of the AI Bubble
ICT News - Mar 20, 2026
Top 10 Most Popular Social Media Sites Based on User Count in 2026
ICT News - Mar 19, 2026
Billion Dollar Blunder: Meta Shuts Down Metaverse After Wasting $80,000,000,000.00
ICT News - Mar 18, 2026
X to Introduce Regional Controls for Posts and Replies
ICT News - Mar 17, 2026
Is DLSS 5 Helping Games or Hurting Developers' Creative Style?
ICT News - Mar 16, 2026
AI's Role in Warfare: US Strikes on Iran Unveiled
ICT News - Mar 15, 2026
Elon Musk's Bold Chip Venture: Tesla's Massive Fab Initiative Sparks AI Hardware...
ICT News - Mar 14, 2026
Elon Musk's High-Stakes $109 Billion Lawsuit Against OpenAI and Microsoft
ICT News - Mar 05, 2026
X Platform Implements Strict Measures Against Fake AI-Generated Videos Amid Iran...
How To - Mar 04, 2026
Getting Started with AI: A Newbie's Simple Guide
Read More
Features- Mar 24, 2026
How to Use GeForce NOW to Play Video Games Without Actual Hardware
GeForce NOW makes PC gaming accessible to a wider audience by removing the barrier of expensive hardware.
ICT News- Mar 24, 2026
OpenAI on the Brink: Major Setbacks Signal the Bursting of the AI Bubble
The era of unchecked AI hype appears to be ending, and the bubble is finally bursting.