Monday, April 7, 2025
HomeChromeMassive Spying Campaign Targets Chrome Browser, Over 32 Million Users Potentially Impacted

Massive Spying Campaign Targets Chrome Browser, Over 32 Million Users Potentially Impacted

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

A newly discovered massive spyware campaign uses Chrome browser extensions aimed to steal sensitive data from users across multiple geographies and industry segments.

Researchers from Awake Security researchers uncovered more than 111 malicious Chrome extensions that use GalComm domains for their command and control operation.

CommuniGal Communication Ltd. (GalComm) is an Israel based internet domain registrar and the company was founded in 2000.

- Advertisement - Google News

Malicious domains & Extensions

Awake security observed that almost 60% of domains registered with GalComm are malicious. They are used for serving malware or involved in surveillance activities.

Those domains used various evasion techniques to stay undetected by most security solutions, here is the complete list of the domains.

All the harvested 111 malicious extensions use GalComm domains for C&C and they are aiming to take screenshots, read the clipboard, harvest credential tokens stored in cookies or parameters, grab user keystrokes and other surveillance activities.

The malicious extensions found to be downloaded for more than 32,962,951, times from Chrome web Store, some of these extensions alone downloaded 10 million times.

“Based on the number of downloads, it was the most far-reaching malicious Chrome store campaign to date,” said Awake co-founder and chief scientist Gary Golomb

Here you can find the malicious Chrome extensions TSV list [1,2].

Most of these malicious extensions are posed to offer file conversion and other utility servers, but their goal is to steal user data.

Malicious Extensions

The massive surveillance campaign specifically targets users in “financial services, oil and gas, media and entertainment, healthcare and pharmaceuticals, retail, high-tech, higher education, and government organizations.”

“When we are alerted of extensions in the Web Store that violate our policies, we take action and use those incidents as training material to improve our automated and manual analyses,” Google spokesman Scott Westover told Reuters.

Google not shared any details about how the spyware apps infiltrated and persist with the Google play store.

Galcomm told Reuters that “his company had done nothing wrong, Galcomm is not involved, and not in complicity with any malicious activity whatsoever.”

Browsers security is crucial nowadays as several Critical applications like Microsoft 365, Google, Salesforce, Workday, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Zoom live in our Internet browsers. Campaigns like this could cause serious damage to business and personal lives.

You can follow us on LinkedinTwitterFacebook for daily Cybersecurity and hacking news updates.

Also Read

Beware of Coronavirus-themed Grandoreiro Malware Attacks Bank Customers Via Chrome Plugin

Google Bans 49 Chrome Extensions Aimed to Steal crypto-wallet Keys

Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

Threat Actors Exploit Fake CAPTCHAs and Cloudflare Turnstile to Distribute LegionLoader

In a sophisticated attack targeting individuals searching for PDF documents online, cybercriminals are using...

HellCat, Rey, and Grep Groups Dispute Claims in Orange and HighWire Press Cases

SuspectFile.com has uncovered a complex web of overlapping claims and accusations within the cybercrime...

AI Surpasses Elite Red Teams in Crafting Effective Spear Phishing Attacks

In a groundbreaking development in the field of cybersecurity, AI has reached a pivotal...

Threat Actors Use Windows Screensaver Files as Malware Delivery Method

Cybersecurity experts at Symantec have uncovered a sophisticated phishing campaign targeting various sectors across...

Supply Chain Attack Prevention

Free Webinar - Supply Chain Attack Prevention

Recent attacks like Polyfill[.]io show how compromised third-party components become backdoors for hackers. PCI DSS 4.0’s Requirement 6.4.3 mandates stricter browser script controls, while Requirement 12.8 focuses on securing third-party providers.

Join Vivekanand Gopalan (VP of Products – Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing – Indusface) as they break down these compliance requirements and share strategies to protect your applications from supply chain attacks.

Discussion points

Meeting PCI DSS 4.0 mandates.
Blocking malicious components and unauthorized JavaScript execution.
PIdentifying attack surfaces from third-party dependencies.
Preventing man-in-the-browser attacks with proactive monitoring.

More like this

Lazarus Adds New Malicious npm Using Hexadecimal String Encoding to Evade Detection Systems

North Korean state-sponsored threat actors associated with the Lazarus Group have intensified their Contagious...

New Credit Card Skimming Campaign Uses Browser Extensions to Steal Financial Data

A newly discovered credit card skimming campaign, dubbed "RolandSkimmer," is exploiting browser extensions to...

Mozilla Releases Urgent Patch for Windows After Chrome Zero-Day Exploit

Mozilla has released an urgent update for Firefox on Windows to address a critical...