126 matches found
CVE-2025-52926
CVE-2025-52926 affects spytrap-adb prior to v0.3.5. The issue is an omission in the scan.rs UI where matches for known stalkerware are not rendered in the interactive user interface, reducing visibility of detected stalkerware within affected builds. The CVSS 3.1 base score is 2.7 (LOW) with LOCA...
CVE-2025-52926
In scan.rs in spytrap-adb before 0.3.5, matches for known stalkerware are not rendered in the interactive user interface...
CVE-2025-52926
In scan.rs in spytrap-adb before 0.3.5, matches for known stalkerware are not rendered in the interactive user interface...
A week in security (May 19 – May 25)
Last week on Malwarebytes Labs: Lumma information stealer infrastructure disrupted Stalkerware apps go dark after data breach Scammers are using AI to impersonate senior officials, warns FBI 23andMe and its customers’ genetic data bought by a pharmaceutical org Malware-infected printer delivered...
Stalkerware apps go dark after data breach
A stalkerware company that recently leaked millions of users' personal information online has taken all of its assets offline without any explanation. Now Malwarebytes has learned that the company has taken down other apps too. Back in February, news emerged of a stalkerware app compromise...
A week in security (February 24 – March 2)
Last week on Malwarebytes Labs: Millions of stalkerware users exposed again PayPal’s "no-code checkout" abused by scammers Countries and companies are fighting at the expense of our data privacy Roblox called "real-life nightmare for children" as Roblox and Discord sued Android happy to check you...
Millions of stalkerware users exposed again
There are many reasons not to use stalkerware, but the risk of getting exposed yourself seems to be a recurring deterrent, according to a new investigaton. As we have reported many times before, stalkerware-type apps are coded so badly that it’s possible to gain access to the back-end databases a...
Hacked GPS tracker reveals location data of customers
Stalkerware researcher maia arson crimew strikes again. Big time. We know maia as a researcher that loves to go after stalkerware peddlers, which Malwarebytes—as one of the founding members of the Coalition Against Stalkerware—loves to see. This time the target company, Tracki, is one selling GPS...
Dangerous monitoring tool mSpy suffers data breach, exposes customer details
In a new episode of Spy vs Spy, the mobile monitoring app mSpy has suffered a data breach that exposed information about millions of its customers. As Malwarebytes Labs has reported before, the types of companies that make mobile applications that enable users to non-consensually spy and monitor ...
pcTattletale spyware leaks database containing victim screenshots, gets website defaced
The idea behind the software is simple. When the spying party installs the stalkerware, they grant permission to record what happens on the targeted Android or Windows device. The observer can then log in on an online portal and activate recording, at which point a screen capture is taken on the...
Microsoft’s New Recall AI Tool May Be a ‘Privacy Nightmare’
Plus: US surveillance reportedly targets pro-Palestinian protesters, the FBI arrests a man for AI-generated CSAM, and stalkerware targets hotel computers...
U.S. Imposes Visa Restrictions on 13 Linked to Commercial Spyware Misuse
The U.S. Department of State on Monday said it's taking steps to impose visa restrictions on 13 individuals who are allegedly involved in the development and sale of commercial spyware or who are immediately family members of those involved in such businesses. "These individuals have facilitated ...
Should you share your location with your partner?
Every relationship has its disagreements. Who takes out the trash and washes the dishes? Who plans the meals and writes out the grocery list? And when is it okay to start tracking one another’s location? Location sharing is becoming the norm between romantic partners—50% of people valued location...
The State of Stalkerware in 2023–2024
The State of Stalkerware in 2023 PDF The annual Kaspersky State of Stalkerware report aims to contribute to awareness and a better understanding of how people around the world are impacted by digital stalking. Stalkerware is commercially available software that can be discreetly installed on...
A week in security (February 12 – February 18)
Last week on Malwarebytes Labs: GoldPickaxe Trojan steals your face! Microsoft Exchange vulnerability actively exploited Massive utility scam campaign spreads via online ads Facebook Marketplace users’ stolen data offered for sale How ransomware changed in 2023 Malwarebytes crushes malware all th...
TheTruthSpy stalkerware, still insecure, still leaking data
In 2022, we published an article about how photographs of children taken by a stalkerware-type app were found exposed on the internet because of poor cybersecurity practices by the app vendor. The stalkerware-type app involved, TheTruthSpy, has shown once again that the way in which it handles...
Stalkerware App “TheTruthSpy” Hacked Again, 50,000 Device Data Stolen
By Waqas The infamous stalkerware app was hacked by SiegedSec and ByteMeCrew, who shared the data with Switzerland-based hacker Maia Arson Crimew. This is a post from HackRead.com Read the original post: Stalkerware App "TheTruthSpy" Hacked Again, 50,000 Device Data Stolen...
What Gen Z really cares about when it comes to privacy
It would be easy to think that Gen Z doesn’t care about privacy. They worry less about ad tracking, do little to stem the flow of their private information online, and, as Malwarebytes recently uncovered, monitor one another’s lives far more than other generations. But it isn’t that Gen Z,...
A week in security (October 9 - October 15)
Last week on Malwarebytes Labs: Explained: Quishing Update now! Atlassian Confluence vulnerability is being actively exploited Giant health insurer struck by ransomware didn't have antivirus protection Ransomware review: October 2023 Stalkerware activity drops as glaring spying problem is reveale...
Stalkerware activity drops as glaring spying problem is revealed
North America has a spying problem. Its perpetrators are everyday people. According to recent research from Malwarebytes, 62 percent of people in the United States and Canada admitted to monitoring their romantic partners online in one form or another, from looking through a spouses or significan...