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Home/Threats/Hackers Exploit ClickFix Prompt for MSI & Hands- Install Package
Threats

Hackers Exploit ClickFix Prompt for MSI & Hands- Install Package

Attackers recently exploited a deceptive “ClickFix” prompt to gain a foothold within an organization, ultimately compromising over 11 systems and deploying two separate remote access...

David kimber
David kimber
June 17, 2026 4 Min Read
5 0

Attackers recently exploited a deceptive “ClickFix” prompt to gain a foothold within an organization, ultimately compromising over 11 systems and deploying two separate remote access tools. This sophisticated campaign, A new campaign using the ClickFix technique has shown how far one unguarded moment can go. ClickFix is a social engineering trick that presents users with a fake troubleshooting instruction on a compromised website.

The prompt tells the user to press Win+R, paste a command into the Windows Run dialog, and hit Enter. It looks like a legitimate fix, and that is the point. People follow clear, authoritative directions, and attackers count on exactly that.

Researchers at Huntress identified this ClickFix attack in May 2026, tracing it from a single unmonitored endpoint through a full hands-on-keyboard intrusion across the victim’s network.

The attacker had already been active for some time before anyone could see what was happening, because the machine where it started had no endpoint agent installed.

The infection began when a user visited a compromised website and ran a command that used pcalua.exe, a legitimate Windows utility, to silently fetch and run a remote script.

That script downloaded and installed an MSI package in the background with no visible indication to the user.

The MSI dropped a custom loader the researchers named Potemkin, which connected to a command-and-control server and loaded a fully featured remote access tool called RMMProject entirely in memory.

Separately, the attacker deployed EtherRAT, a Node.js backdoor that retrieves its server address from the Ethereum blockchain, making it hard to disrupt through traditional domain takedowns. 

Attack chain (Source - Huntress)
Attack chain (Source – Huntress)

Huntress said in a report shared with Cyber Security News (CSN) that the intrusion escalated quickly, with the operator moving across the network using WMIExec and SMBExec, fighting through Windows Defender, and eventually killing the antivirus service before EtherRAT reached over 11 hosts.

Hackers Use ClickFix Prompt

The attack started with a ClickFix command that abused pcalua.exe to proxy mshta.exe, fetching a remote HTA file from cl.distritovagas[.]com.

That HTA payload silently downloaded the MSI installer, inst24.msi, from an attacker-controlled server and executed it without any prompt.

The MSI deployed Potemkin into the user’s AppData folder and registered a startup registry key so it would survive every reboot.

XorShift32 inlined into the per-word loop (Source - Huntress)
XorShift32 inlined into the per-word loop (Source – Huntress)

Potemkin is a lean, purpose-built loader with a Domain Generation Algorithm that produces 10,000 candidate domains from a built-in word list and probes each one until it finds a live server.

Once connected, its only job is to fetch and reflectively load RMMProject, a 4.4 MB DLL with 15 task types covering browser credential theft, cookie stealing across Chrome, Firefox, and Edge, a hidden remote desktop module, and process injection.

Wireshark capture of a Potemkin DGA probe to C2 anus-staylard[.]xyz (Source - Huntress)
Wireshark capture of a Potemkin DGA probe to C2 anus-staylard[.]xyz (Source – Huntress)

Five hours later, the attacker dropped EtherRAT and set up a Cloudflare tunnel using a renamed copy of cloudflared, securing persistent internet-reachable access inside the network.

Hands-On Intrusion and Defender Evasion

Once inside, a human operator took direct control and began working through the network manually.

They used compromised Administrator credentials, ran reconnaissance consistent with the Impacket toolkit, and moved laterally to the domain controller via WMIExec and SMBExec.

The goal was to spread EtherRAT across as many hosts as possible while establishing multiple fallback paths.

EtherRAT detections in the Huntress Portal (Source - Huntress)
EtherRAT detections in the Huntress Portal (Source – Huntress)

The attacker worked hard to silence Windows Defender throughout the session. They cycled through AMSI patches, registry policy writes, reflective in-memory loading, and exclusion path abuse before stopping the Defender service outright.

A reverse shell on port 43301 and multiple Chisel SOCKS tunnels gave them layered persistence that could survive individual detections.

Huntress recommended that organizations immediately audit endpoint coverage, since the whole intrusion started on a machine with no monitoring agent.

Disabling the Windows Run dialog through Group Policy removes the ClickFix entry point, as the attack depends on the user pasting a command into that dialog.

Teams should alert on cloudflared or renamed copies on endpoints, and treat Stop-Service WinDefend alongside bulk Add-MpPreference exclusion commands as high-confidence threat signals.

Indicators of Compromise (IoCs):-

Type Indicator Description
SHA256 2abe5dd3a057fdef935722e50e9251c272d29fd26113187b853a1f9a9cb89d9b Potemkin Loader (RunSearch.exe)
SHA256 3b7ae925e2d64522b4f69b56285b05aeca8c5aab5ab46a9c02c4fafb69d881ce RMMProject RAT (avast_update.bin)
SHA256 cd4e5e2c65b1660470d3446539ee68adf5faeece3eaeb46583623be9911ee145 ABE helper DLL embedded in RMMProject; injected into Chrome/Edge to bypass App-Bound Encryption
SHA256 79f7b67ce8b39070f3e1c2b90fce0ce84134782a7dedcccc1edac197ee9e089b inst24.msi – MSI installer that drops Potemkin
SHA256 2ada24dd6e517f37942b749c2bd57ddd97445e9853002cee70a0bc30d0b0ce3a cons_1.0.1.msi – MSI that delivers EtherRAT
IP Address 77.110.122[.]58 Primary C2 and staging server
IP Address 213.165.41[.]26 Chisel reverse SOCKS server
IP Address 198.41.200[.]63 Cloudflare edge IP (cloudflared tunnel contact)
IP Address 198.41.192[.]77 Cloudflare edge IP (cloudflared tunnel contact)
Domain cl.distritovagas[.]com ClickFix HTA delivery domain
Domain sonra.eutialyson[.]com MSI download domain
Domain anus-staylard[.]xyz Live C2 domain for Potemkin and RMMProject
Domain resumeacceptable[.]com EtherRAT C2 resolved from Ethereum blockchain
Ethereum Contract 0xb3f2897f2bc797e5b9033faef8c81e92b01cb831 EtherRAT Ethereum contract address
Ethereum Storage Key 0x40b57c3622c1CbfD699207F71F2dE5A8Fe256893 EtherRAT storage key
Build ID ab653feb-9e78-4578-87ed-2e30329fe858 EtherRAT hardcoded build identifier
File Path C:WindowsTempD0OK1nWwId9W.ps1 First malicious PowerShell script dropped
File Path C:WindowsTemplQhEQui9a4lZ.exe Chisel client binary
File Path C:ProgramDatapO67tak2KFRmJ.ps1 In-memory reflective Chisel loader
File Path C:ProgramDatapJ6Gupb9TpYNI.ps1 PowerShell script to download the Chisel client
File Path C:ProgramDatapfsjH6IHuUkhh.ps1 AMSI bypass + Defender registry disable + reflective Chisel load
File Path C:ProgramDatapek_full.ps1 Registry-based Defender disable script
File Path C:ProgramDatapek_kill_av.ps1 Defender kill via registry policies, Set-MpPreference toggles, and service stops
File Path C:ProgramDatapek_disable_av.ps1 Defender disable script
File Path C:ProgramDatapyH88LG8yCOnU.ps1 Reverse shell looping TCP connection to 77.110.122[.]58:43301
Registry Key HKCUSOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionRunRunSearch Potemkin loader persistence key
Registry Key HKCUSOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionRunEdgeUpdate EtherRAT persistence key (masquerades as Edge updater)
File Path %LOCALAPPDATA%hyper-v.ver Potemkin UUID persistence file
File Path %TEMP%dll_debug.log Potemkin debug log

Note: IP addresses and domains are intentionally defanged (e.g., [.]) to prevent accidental resolution or hyperlinking. Re-fang only within controlled threat intelligence platforms such as MISP, VirusTotal, or your SIEM.

Disclaimer: HackersRadar reports on cybersecurity threats and incidents for informational and awareness purposes only. We do not engage in hacking activities, data exfiltration, or the hosting or distribution of stolen or leaked information. All content is based on publicly available sources.

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David kimber

David kimber

David is a penetration tester turned security journalist with expertise in mobile security, IoT vulnerabilities, and exploit development. As an OSCP-certified security professional, David brings hands-on technical experience to his reporting on vulnerabilities and security research. His articles often feature detailed technical analysis of exploits and provide actionable defense recommendations. David maintains an active presence in the security research community and has contributed to multiple open-source security tools.

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