Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Hackers are targeting Microsoft Teams on Mac

Fake Microsoft Teams site to download malware.
Malwarebytes

Apple users may tend to think that their Macs are less likely to become victims of viruses and malware. However, threats such as MacStealer and other Mac malware that steal credit card information prove otherwise.

A new weakness is highlighted in a new report from Malwarebytes, which mentions a new Microsoft Teams malvertising campaign targeting Mac users.

Recommended Videos

Hackers are trying to lure unsuspecting Mac users to a fake Microsoft Teams site to “download the app,” taking advantage of the app’s popularity. But what they get is Atomic Stealer malware that steals passwords from Apple keychains and web browsers.

Mac users end up at these fake sites by clicking on a phony ad (that appears at the top of the search result) from a compromised Google ad account in Hong Kong. The fake page shows you the Apple logo, a short summary of how the app works, and a button that says “Download Teams.”

Malicious ad example for Microsoft Teams.
Malwarebytes

This isn’t the first time fake ads have been used to steal Mac data. Just last month, in the Poseidon campaign, hackers used fake ads for the Arc browser, offering users a malicious DMG installer. Both malvertising campaigns use parallel code-based and delivery techniques. Malwarebytes comments that it is the first time it has seen it used by Atomic Stealer, and it uses advanced filtering techniques.

Mac users will see a red flag in the installation process since the malicious file encourages users to right-click for installation. The right-click process bypasses Apple’s built-in protection system for unsigned installers. Once you type your credentials, your Mac is compromised as the malware takes your sensitive data and sends it back to the hacker.

If you think your Mac has malware, you can follow these steps to check it for viruses and malware. However, you can prevent malware from getting in by not clicking on any of the ads at the top of the list in your Google Search results. Being careful about what links you can click on can also help.

Judy Sanhz
Computing Writer
Judy Sanhz is a Digital Trends computing writer covering all computing news. Loves all operating systems and devices.
Finding a new GPU in 2026 might get a lot harder
Your next graphics card upgrade could take longer than expected
NVIDIA RTX 5090

It looks like PC gamers might be in for another rough ride next year. A new report claims NVIDIA is planning to drastically dial back production of its GeForce RTX 50-series graphics cards in 2026. The problem isn’t that people aren’t buying them; it’s that the global memory market is in a crunch, and the massive explosion of artificial intelligence is eating up all the supply.

AI demand may squeeze RTX 50-series supply

Read more
Your next MacBook could use an iPhone-class chip
Leaked Apple engineering files point to an A18 Pro-based MacBook that reads more like a shippable configuration than the A15 test entry.
The Apple MacBook Pro 14 M5 sitting on a woman's lap at the airport.

Apple may be inching toward an iPhone-class chip MacBook, and the trail starts in a place most people never see: internal kernel debug kit files used by its engineers. MacRumors reports that Apple accidentally posted the kit on its website earlier this year, then pulled it after details began leaking.

Inside the Mac-related listings, the files reference two unreleased MacBook setups. One uses the older A15, the other points to A18 Pro. The split matters because it suggests Apple tested the concept with whatever worked, then moved on to something that looks closer to a real product candidate.

Read more
It just got a lot easier to control a Windows 11 PC with your Android phone
Android smartphones now act as a multipurpose remote control for Windows 11 devices, offering instant locking, seamless file transfers, shared clipboard access, and easy screen mirroring.
microsoft-Phone-Link-app-windows-11

Microsoft has rolled out a significant upgrade to its Phone Link system and the "Link To Windows" app for Android, improving cross-platform connectivity with Windows 11. First and foremost, there's a new "Lock PC" toggle that lets you lock your Windows device remotely from your smartphone (provided the devices are connected).

According to a new report by Windows Latest, locking a Windows 11 PC from an Android phone takes a couple of seconds. Once unlocked, the PC reconnects to your phone. Besides that, the app also gets a "Recent Activity" feed that shows file transfers and clipboard history shared between the devices. There's a dashboard of the recent cross-device transactions.

Read more