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Welcome to the Era of Career Fog, Where Workers Feel Paralyzed

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For many workers, career dissatisfaction isn’t loud or dramatic. It shows up as uncertainty, hesitation, and a lingering sense of being off track without knowing how to course-correct. New national survey data from MyPerfectResume suggests this feeling has become widespread. More than half of U.S. workers say they lack clarity about their long-term career direction, and most have questioned…

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Everything you need to know about the malware stealing data from Mac users

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MacBook in the dark using Terminal

Mac users have a new malware threat to be on the watch out for.

According to a new report by Malwarebytes, Infiniti Stealer is a new malware attack targeting Mac users that utilizes social engineering tactics and, once the payload is delivered to the device, is very difficult to detect.

Infiniti Stealer

The hacker's campaign, according to the report, begins with a social engineering technique known as ClickFix. ClickFix is a tactic that tricks the target themself into executing malicious code on their computer.

The targeted user is presented with a website, often through a phishing email or a pop-up on a compromised page, with an urgent update warning that claims to require the user to complete a Cloudflare human verification captcha.

The target is presented with a traditional "I am not a robot" box to check. However, the target is also asked to complete a "manual step." The page instructs the user to go to Spotlight on their Mac and search for the Terminal app. They are then instructed to paste a provided code into Terminal and hit return.

This code delivers Infiniti Stealer to the target's Mac.

"Because the user runs the command directly, many traditional defenses are bypassed," Malwarebytes says in its report. "There’s no exploit, no malicious attachment, and no drive‑by download."

According to Malwaybytes, the malware that's delivered to the victim's Mac is written in Python but compiled with Nuitka, which creates a native macOS binary. This makes Infiniti Stealer much more difficult to analyze and detect than the more typical type of malware.

"To our knowledge, this is the first documented macOS campaign combining ClickFix delivery with a Nuitka-compiled Python stealer," Malwarebytes says.

Once Infiniti Stealer is installed on a device, it will attempt to steal data from the victim's Mac and upload that information to the attacker's own server. Passwords, screenshots, browser data like cookies, and other sensitive information can be stolen from victims in these types of malware attacks.

Be aware of malware threats

Users should always be careful when following instructions from a website that they are unfamiliar with. Even then, users should be careful they are on a legitimate website of a company they do recognize and not a phishing website run by a bad actor.

Users should be aware that there is no form of captcha or verification that requires code to be entered in the Terminal app.

Furthermore, I typically recommend that anyone who isn't somewhat familiar with code to avoid any process that requires entering code in their Mac's Terminal.

If a user believes they may have been infected with malware, Malwarebytes recommends that they stop using the affected computer. They should change their account passwords on a completely separate device and, if possible, revoke access from the infected computer.

Infiniti Stealer appears to follow a new trend of bad actors targeting Apple devices due to the incorrect perception that they are immune from viruses and other types of attacks. DarkSword, for example, is another new threat targeting iPhones and other iOS devices with a malware attack that doesn't even require a user to download any sort of malicious file.

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Want to Rent Your Home for World Cup? Airbnb Tracker Estimates Profit

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Gemini / Google

Summer is right around the corner, and with it the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Matches will kick off in June and run for more than a month across North America. Four dozen teams will compete in 104 matches in 16 cities. Eight matches will be played at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, known as the “Atlanta stadium” during the tournament. The city has been getting ready to host the thousands of domestic and…

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Why Gen Z Workers View Their Current Roles as Just Stepping Stones

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Burned out worker buries her head in her handsfizkes / Shutterstock.com

Loyalty to employers is quickly fading among the youngest generation in the workforce. Zety’s latest Gen Z Workplace Expectations Report, based on a national survey of 1,001 Gen Z workers in the U.S., reveals a generation navigating widespread burnout while reassessing what makes a job worth investing in long term. As expectations around culture, flexibility, and career growth evolve…

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