Dozens of malicious wallpapers found on Steam Workshop


Since late 2025, malware has been spreading rapidly through the Steam Workshop, the gaming platform’s built-in service for players to create and share custom content. The attackers are primarily targeting gamers in China and Russia, aiming to hijack their accounts. To pull this off, they are exploiting Wallpaper Engine – a popular live wallpaper app available on Steam – specifically leveraging its Workshop sharing feature. The malware is hidden inside the wallpaper packages users share with one another. Running one of these compromised wallpapers can lead to a stolen Steam account or leave the victim’s system infected with backdoors or crypto miners.

Read more…
Source:  Kaspersky


Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox


Related:

  • Smarter, Not Harder: How to Intelligently Prioritize Attack Surface Risk

    November 18, 2022

    There’s a common saying in cyber security, “you can’t protect what you don’t know,” and this applies perfectly to the attack surface of any given organization. Many organizations have hidden risks throughout their extended IT and security infrastructure. Whether the risk is introduced by organic cloud growth, adoption of IoT devices, or through mergers and acquisitions, ...

  • Earth Preta Spear-Phishing Governments Worldwide

    November 17, 2022

    Trend Micro researchers have been monitoring a wave of spear-phishing attacks targeting the government, academic, foundations, and research sectors around the world. Based on the lure documents researchers observed in the wild, this is a large-scale cyberespionage campaign that began around March. After months of tracking, the seemingly wide outbreak of targeted attacks includes but ...

  • #StopRansomware: Hive Ransomware

    November 17, 2022

    As of November 2022, Hive ransomware actors have victimized over 1,300 companies worldwide, receiving approximately US$100 million in ransom payments, according to FBI information. Hive ransomware follows the ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) model in which developers create, maintain, and update the malware, and affiliates conduct the ransomware attacks. From June 2021 through at least November 2022, threat ...

  • CISA, NSA, and ODNI Release Guidance for Customers on Securing the Software Supply Chain

    November 17, 2022

    Today, CISA, the National Security Agency (NSA), and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), published the third of a three-part series on securing the software supply chain: Securing Software Supply Chain Series – Recommended Practices Guide for Customers. This publication follows the August 2022 release of guidance for developers and October 2022 ...

  • QBot phishing abuses Windows Control Panel EXE to infect devices

    November 17, 2022

    Phishing emails distributing the QBot malware are using a DLL hijacking flaw in the Windows 10 Control Panel to infect computers, likely as an attempt to evade detection by security software. DLL hijacking is a common attack method that takes advantage of how Dynamic Link Libraries (DLLs) are loaded in Windows. When a Windows executable is launched, ...

  • Get a Loda This: LodaRAT meets new friends

    November 17, 2022

    Since their first blog post in February of 2020 on the remote access tool (RAT) known as LodaRAT (or Loda), Cisco Talos has monitored its activity and covered their findings in subsequent blog posts. As a continuation of this series, this blog post details new variants and new behavior Cisco Talos researchers have observed while monitoring ...