IT threat evolution in Q2 2025. Non-mobile statistics
IT threat evolution in Q2 2025. Mobile statistics
The statistics in this report are based on detection verdicts returned by Kaspersky products unless otherwise stated. The information was provided by Kaspersky users who consented to sharing statistical data.
In Q2 2025:
The alleged malicious actor behind the Black Kingdom ransomware attacks was indicted in the U.S. The Yemeni national is accused of infecting about 1,500 computers in the U.S. and other countries through vulnerabilities in Microsoft Exchange. He also stands accused of demanding a ransom of $10,000 in bitcoin, which is the amount victims saw in the ransom note. He is also alleged to be the developer of the Black Kingdom ransomware.
A Ukrainian national was extradited to the U.S. in the Nefilim case. He was arrested in Spain in June 2024 on charges of distributing ransomware and extorting victims. According to the investigation, he had been part of the Nefilim Ransomware-as-a-Service (RaaS) operation since 2021, targeting high-revenue organizations. Nefilim uses the classic double extortion scheme: cybercriminals steal the victim’s data, encrypt it, then threaten to publish it online.
Also arrested was a member of the Ryuk gang, charged with organizing initial access to victims’ networks. The accused was apprehended in Kyiv in April 2025 at the request of the FBI and extradited to the U.S. in June.
A man suspected of being involved in attacks by the DoppelPaymer gang was arrested. In a joint operation by law enforcement in the Netherlands and Moldova, the 45-year-old was arrested in May. He is accused of carrying out attacks against Dutch organizations in 2021. Authorities seized around €84,800 and several devices.
A 39-year-old Iranian national pleaded guilty to participating in RobbinHood ransomware attacks. Among the targets of the attacks, which took place from 2019 to 2024, were U.S. local government agencies, healthcare providers, and non-profit organizations.
In May, it was revealed that several ransomware gangs, including BianLian and RansomExx, had been exploiting CVE-2025-31324 in SAP NetWeaver software. Successful exploitation of this vulnerability allows attackers to upload malicious files without authentication, which can lead to a complete system compromise.
The DragonForce group compromised an MSP provider, attacking its clients with the help of the SimpleHelp remote administration tool. According to researchers, the attackers exploited a set of vulnerabilities (CVE-2024-57727, CVE-2024-57728, CVE-2024-57726) in the software to launch the DragonForce ransomware on victims’ hosts.
In June, news broke that the Qilin gang (also known as Agenda) was actively exploiting critical vulnerabilities in Fortinet devices to infiltrate corporate networks. The attackers allegedly exploited the vulnerabilities CVE-2024-21762 and CVE-2024-55591 in FortiGate software, which allowed them to bypass authentication and execute malicious code remotely. After gaining access, the cybercriminals encrypted data on systems within the corporate network and demanded a ransom.
April saw the detection of attacks that leveraged CVE-2025-29824, a zero-day vulnerability in the Windows Common Log File System (CLFS) driver, a core component of the Windows OS. This vulnerability allows an attacker to elevate privileges on a compromised system. Researchers have linked these incidents to the RansomExx and Play gangs. The attackers targeted companies in North and South America, Europe, and the Middle East.
This section highlights the most prolific ransomware gangs by number of victims added to each group’s DLS during the reporting period. In the second quarter, Qilin (12.07%) proved to be the most prolific group. RansomHub, the leader of 2024 and the first quarter of 2025, seems to have gone dormant since April. Clop (10.83%) and Akira (8.53%) swapped places compared to the previous reporting period.
Number of each group’s victims according to its DLS as a percentage of all groups’ victims published on all the DLSs under review during the reporting period (download)
In the second quarter, Kaspersky solutions detected three new families and 1,702 new ransomware variants. This is significantly fewer than in the previous reporting period. The decrease is linked to the renewed decline in the count of the Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Gen
verdicts, following a spike last quarter.
Number of new ransomware modifications, Q2 2024 — Q2 2025 (download)
Our solutions protected a total of 85,702 unique users from ransomware during the second quarter.
Number of unique users attacked by ransomware Trojans, Q2 2025 (download)
Country/territory* | %** | |
1 | Libya | 0.66 |
2 | China | 0.58 |
3 | Rwanda | 0.57 |
4 | South Korea | 0.51 |
5 | Tajikistan | 0.49 |
6 | Bangladesh | 0.45 |
7 | Iraq | 0.45 |
8 | Pakistan | 0.38 |
9 | Brazil | 0.38 |
10 | Tanzania | 0.35 |
* Excluded are countries and territories with relatively few (under 50,000) Kaspersky users.
** Unique users whose computers were attacked by ransomware Trojans as a percentage of all unique users of Kaspersky products in the country/territory.
Name | Verdict | %* | |
1 | (generic verdict) | Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Gen | 23.33 |
2 | WannaCry | Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Wanna | 7.80 |
3 | (generic verdict) | Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Encoder | 6.25 |
4 | (generic verdict) | Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Crypren | 6.24 |
5 | (generic verdict) | Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Agent | 3.75 |
6 | Cryakl/CryLock | Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Cryakl | 3.34 |
7 | PolyRansom/VirLock | Virus.Win32.PolyRansom / Trojan-Ransom.Win32.PolyRansom | 3.03 |
8 | (generic verdict) | Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Crypmod | 2.81 |
9 | (generic verdict) | Trojan-Ransom.Win32.Phny | 2.78 |
10 | (generic verdict) | Trojan-Ransom.MSIL.Agent | 2.41 |
* Unique Kaspersky users attacked by the specific ransomware Trojan family as a percentage of all unique users attacked by this type of threat.
In the second quarter of 2025, Kaspersky solutions detected 2,245 new modifications of miners.
Number of new miner modifications, Q2 2025 (download)
During the second quarter, we detected attacks using miner programs on the computers of 279,630 unique Kaspersky users worldwide.
Number of unique users attacked by miners, Q2 2025 (download)
Country/territory* | %** | |
1 | Senegal | 3.49 |
2 | Panama | 1.31 |
3 | Kazakhstan | 1.11 |
4 | Ethiopia | 1.02 |
5 | Belarus | 1.01 |
6 | Mali | 0.96 |
7 | Tajikistan | 0.88 |
8 | Tanzania | 0.80 |
9 | Moldova | 0.80 |
10 | Dominican Republic | 0.80 |
* Excluded are countries and territories with relatively few (under 50,000) Kaspersky users.
** Unique users whose computers were attacked by miners as a percentage of all unique users of Kaspersky products in the country/territory.
Among the threats to macOS, one of the biggest discoveries of the second quarter was the PasivRobber family. This spyware consists of a huge number of modules designed to steal data from QQ, WeChat, and other messaging apps and applications that are popular mainly among Chinese users. Its distinctive feature is that the spyware modules get embedded into the target process when the device goes into sleep mode.
Closer to the middle of the quarter, several reports (1, 2, 3) emerged about attackers stepping up their activity, posing as victims’ trusted contacts on Telegram and convincing them to join a Zoom call. During or before the call, the user was persuaded to run a seemingly Zoom-related utility, but which was actually malware. The infection chain led to the download of a backdoor written in the Nim language and bash scripts that stole data from browsers.
* Unique users who encountered this malware as a percentage of all attacked users of Kaspersky security solutions for macOS (download)
* Data for the previous quarter may differ slightly from previously published data due to some verdicts being retrospectively revised.
A new piece of spyware named PasivRobber, discovered in the second quarter, immediately became the most widespread threat, attacking more users than the fake cleaners and adware typically seen on macOS. Also among the most common threats were the password- and crypto wallet-stealing Trojan Amos and the general detection Trojan.OSX.Agent.gen
, which we described in our previous report.
Country/territory | %* Q1 2025 | %* Q2 2025 |
Mainland China | 0.73% | 2.50% |
France | 1.52% | 1.08% |
Hong Kong | 1.21% | 0.84% |
India | 0.84% | 0.76% |
Mexico | 0.85% | 0.76% |
Brazil | 0.66% | 0.70% |
Germany | 0.96% | 0.69% |
Singapore | 0.32% | 0.63% |
Russian Federation | 0.50% | 0.41% |
South Korea | 0.10% | 0.32% |
* Unique users who encountered threats to macOS as a percentage of all unique Kaspersky users in the country/territory.
This section presents statistics on attacks targeting Kaspersky IoT honeypots. The geographic data on attack sources is based on the IP addresses of attacking devices.
In the second quarter of 2025, there was another increase in both the share of attacks using the Telnet protocol and the share of devices connecting to Kaspersky honeypots via this protocol.
Distribution of attacked services by number of unique IP addresses of attacking devices (download)
Distribution of attackers’ sessions in Kaspersky honeypots (download)
Share of each threat delivered to an infected device as a result of a successful attack, out of the total number of threats delivered (download)
In the second quarter, the share of the NyaDrop botnet among threats delivered to our honeypots grew significantly to 30.27%. Conversely, the number of Mirai variants on the list of most common malware decreased, as did the share of most of them. Additionally, after a spike in the first quarter, the share of BitCoinMiner miners dropped to 1.57%.
During the reporting period, the list of most common IoT threats expanded with new families. The activity of the Agent.nx
backdoor (4.48%), controlled via P2P through the BitTorrent DHT distributed hash table, grew markedly. Another newcomer to the list, Prometei, is a Linux version of a Windows botnet that was first discovered in December 2020.
Geographically speaking, the percentage of SSH attacks originating from Germany and the U.S. increased sharply.
Country/territory | Q1 2025 | Q2 2025 |
Germany | 1.60% | 24.58% |
United States | 5.52% | 10.81% |
Russian Federation | 9.16% | 8.45% |
Australia | 2.75% | 8.01% |
Seychelles | 1.32% | 6.54% |
Bulgaria | 1.25% | 3.66% |
The Netherlands | 0.63% | 3.53% |
Vietnam | 2.27% | 3.00% |
Romania | 1.34% | 2.92% |
India | 19.16% | 2.89% |
The share of Telnet attacks originating from China and India remained high, with more than half of all attacks on Kaspersky honeypots coming from these two countries combined.
Country/territory | Q1 2025 | Q2 2025 |
China | 39.82% | 47.02% |
India | 30.07% | 28.08% |
Indonesia | 2.25% | 5.54% |
Russian Federation | 5.14% | 4.85% |
Pakistan | 3.99% | 3.58% |
Brazil | 12.03% | 2.35% |
Nigeria | 3.01% | 1.66% |
Germany | 0.09% | 1.47% |
United States | 0.68% | 0.75% |
Argentina | 0.01% | 0.70% |
The statistics in this section are based on detection verdicts by Web Anti-Virus, which protects users when suspicious objects are downloaded from malicious or infected web pages. Cybercriminals create malicious pages with a goal in mind. Websites that host user-generated content, such as message boards, as well as compromised legitimate sites, can become infected.
This section gives the geographical distribution of sources of online attacks blocked by Kaspersky products: web pages that redirect to exploits; sites that host exploits and other malware; botnet C2 centers, and the like. Any unique host could be the source of one or more web-based attacks.
To determine the geographic source of web attacks, we matched the domain name with the real IP address where the domain is hosted, then identified the geographic location of that IP address (GeoIP).
In the second quarter of 2025, Kaspersky solutions blocked 471,066,028 attacks from internet resources worldwide. Web Anti-Virus responded to 77,371,384 unique URLs.
Web-based attacks by country, Q2 2025 (download)
To assess the risk of malware infection via the internet for users’ computers in different countries and territories, we calculated the share of Kaspersky users in each location who experienced a Web Anti-Virus alert during the reporting period. The resulting data provides an indication of the aggressiveness of the environment in which computers operate in different countries and territories.
This ranked list includes only attacks by malicious objects classified as Malware. Our calculations leave out Web Anti-Virus detections of potentially dangerous or unwanted programs, such as RiskTool or adware.
Country/territory* | %** | |
1 | Bangladesh | 10.85 |
2 | Tajikistan | 10.70 |
3 | Belarus | 8.96 |
4 | Nepal | 8.45 |
5 | Algeria | 8.21 |
6 | Moldova | 8.16 |
7 | Turkey | 8.08 |
8 | Qatar | 8.07 |
9 | Albania | 8.03 |
10 | Hungary | 7.96 |
11 | Tunisia | 7.95 |
12 | Portugal | 7.93 |
13 | Greece | 7.90 |
14 | Serbia | 7.84 |
15 | Bulgaria | 7.79 |
16 | Sri Lanka | 7.72 |
17 | Morocco | 7.70 |
18 | Georgia | 7.68 |
19 | Peru | 7.63 |
20 | North Macedonia | 7.58 |
* Excluded are countries and territories with relatively few (under 10,000) Kaspersky users.
** Unique users targeted by Malware attacks as a percentage of all unique users of Kaspersky products in the country.
On average during the quarter, 6.36% of internet users’ computers worldwide were subjected to at least one Malware web-based attack.
Statistics on local infections of user computers are an important indicator. They include objects that penetrated the target computer by infecting files or removable media, or initially made their way onto the computer in non-open form. Examples of the latter are programs in complex installers and encrypted files.
Data in this section is based on analyzing statistics produced by anti-virus scans of files on the hard drive at the moment they were created or accessed, and the results of scanning removable storage media. The statistics are based on detection verdicts from the On-Access Scan (OAS) and On-Demand Scan (ODS) modules of File Anti-Virus. This includes malware found directly on user computers or on connected removable media: flash drives, camera memory cards, phones, and external hard drives.
In the second quarter of 2025, our File Anti-Virus recorded 23,260,596 malicious and potentially unwanted objects.
For each country and territory, we calculated the percentage of Kaspersky users whose devices experienced a File Anti-Virus triggering at least once during the reporting period. This statistic reflects the level of personal computer infection in different countries and territories around the world.
Note that this ranked list includes only attacks by malicious objects classified as Malware. Our calculations leave out File Anti-Virus detections of potentially dangerous or unwanted programs, such as RiskTool or adware.
Country/territory* | %** | |
1 | Turkmenistan | 45.26 |
2 | Afghanistan | 34.95 |
3 | Tajikistan | 34.43 |
4 | Yemen | 31.95 |
5 | Cuba | 30.85 |
6 | Uzbekistan | 28.53 |
7 | Syria | 26.63 |
8 | Vietnam | 24.75 |
9 | South Sudan | 24.56 |
10 | Algeria | 24.21 |
11 | Bangladesh | 23.79 |
12 | Belarus | 23.67 |
13 | Gabon | 23.37 |
14 | Niger | 23.35 |
15 | Cameroon | 23.10 |
16 | Tanzania | 22.77 |
17 | China | 22.74 |
18 | Iraq | 22.47 |
19 | Burundi | 22.30 |
20 | Congo | 21.84 |
* Excluded are countries and territories with relatively few (under 10,000) Kaspersky users.
** Unique users on whose computers Malware local threats were blocked, as a percentage of all unique users of Kaspersky products in the country/territory.
Overall, 12.94% of user computers globally faced at least one Malware local threat during the second quarter.
The figure for Russia was 14.27%.