All statistics in this report come from Kaspersky Security Network (KSN), a global cloud service that receives information from components in our security solutions voluntarily provided by Kaspersky users. Millions of Kaspersky users around the globe assist us in collecting information about malicious activity. The statistics in this report cover the period from November 2024 through October 2025. The report doesn’t cover mobile statistics, which we will share in our annual mobile malware report.
During the reporting period:
48% of Windows users and 29% of macOS users encountered cyberthreats
27% of all Kaspersky users encountered web threats, and 33% users were affected by on-device threats
The highest share of users affected by web threats was in CIS (34%), and local threats were most often detected in Africa (41%)
Kaspersky solutions prevented nearly 1,6 times more password stealer attacks than in the previous year
In APAC password stealer detections saw a 132% surge compared to the previous year
Kaspersky solutions detected 1,5 times more spyware attacks than in the previous year
To find more yearly statistics on cyberthreats view the full report.
Kaspersky discloses new tools and techniques discovered in 2025 Tomiris activities: multi-language reverse shells, Havoc and AdaptixC2 open-source frameworks, communications via Discord and Telegram.
Kaspersky experts analyze the ToddyCat APT attacks targeting corporate email. We examine the new version of TomBerBil, the TCSectorCopy and XstReader tools, and methods for stealing access tokens from Outlook.
Kaspersky GReAT experts dive deep into the BlueNoroff APT’s GhostCall and GhostHire campaigns. Extensive research detailing multiple malware chains targeting macOS, including a stealer suite, fake Zoom and Microsoft Teams clients and ChatGPT-enhanced images.
Kaspersky researchers discovered previously unidentified commercial Dante spyware developed by Memento Labs (formerly Hacking Team) and linked it to the ForumTroll APT attacks.