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Hacking. Disinformation. Surveillance. CYBER is Motherboard's podcast and reporting on the dark underbelly of the internet.
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MSI did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In the release, MSI said it has taken "necessary" action against the site, hinting that it has sent a cease and desist letter based on copyright infringement, or even contacted the website's domain registrar, "to remove the malicious imposter website." The allegedly malicious website mimics MSI's official website and offers downloads for Afterburner, according to the company. At this time, the official Afterburner Software download link "is currently closed due to routine maintenance," according to MSI. So it appears hackers are trying to take advantage of this by offering users an apparent alternative way to download the software. Afterburner is software that allows users to monitor and tweak their graphic card's performance. Critically, it allows them to "overclock" cards so they can get higher (but sometimes less stable) performance. We're in the middle of a global semiconductor shortage that's making it near impossible to buy new GPUs, so many gamers might be trying to get more performance out of the cards they already own by overclocking them.According VirusTotal, the world's largest repository of malware, no antivirus software or engine flags the impersonator website as malicious. At the time of writing, the https://afterburner-msi[.]space website appears to be down. Before it went down, Chrome displayed a warning when trying to visit it. Subscribe to our cybersecurity podcast, CYBER."DO NOT DOWNLOAD ANY SOFTWARE FROM THIS WEBSITE."