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Opera Browser Gains Protection Against Malicious Clipboard Commands

Opera browser has announced a new security feature called Paste Protect that aims to stop clipboard-based cyberattacks before their malicious commands can be accidentally executed.

Paste Protect opera
Opera says it's the first major browser to offer native protection against ClickFix attacks – a growing form of social engineering that tricks users into copying and pasting malicious commands into a computer's terminal. The new feature is built into Opera's desktop browsers and enabled by default.

ClickFix attacks typically masquerade as routine troubleshooting prompts, such as fake CAPTCHA verification or video playback fixes. Once pasted and executed, the commands can install malware, steal passwords, or give attackers remote access to a device. Opera describes the browsing risk as follows:

A ClickFix-style attack usually starts with something small and ordinary: a video that won't play, or a CAPTCHA that won't quite verify you're human. A pop-up offers a fix, telling you to copy a short command and paste it into your computer's terminal. It looks like routine troubleshooting. In reality, that command can install malware, steal saved passwords, or hand an attacker remote access to your machine, all carried out by the user's own hands, on their own device.

Opera features an existing clipboard hijack protection feature that prevents external applications from silently replacing copied content such as cryptocurrency wallet addresses. Paste Protect combines this with a new injection protection system that monitors clipboard activity for suspicious commands copied from websites and blocks potentially malicious content before it reaches the clipboard.

Users can see the first 120 characters of the blocked content, and developers working with trusted sources can override the block or mark specific sites as safe.

Opera cited research from cybersecurity firm Huntress that said ClickFix accounted for more than 53 percent of malware-loading cyberattacks last year, indicating the rapid growth of the technique.

Apple itself introduced a related safeguard for the Mac with the release of macOS Tahoe 26.4 earlier this year. Following the update, the operating system explicitly warns the user before they paste potentially dangerous commands into the Terminal app.

Opera browser is available now as a free update and can be downloaded from the company's website.

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Top Rated Comments

cjsuk Avatar
1 day ago at 05:45 am
That'll save their two customers a lot of headaches.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
21 hours ago at 08:08 am
But does the Opera browser provide protection from their Chinese conglomerate that owns it?
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
22 hours ago at 07:53 am
It’s nice but don’t underestimate people’s ability to ignore warnings when told to do so

If you’ve ever seen a YouTube video about tech support scammers you’ll know how ineffective all those “Never give this code to anyone you don’t know” warnings are when the two people involved are a senior citizen who’s worried they’ve been hacked and some scumbag insisting “the warning is because this is a robotic support server ma’am, just click accept”

Or some kid who REALLY thinks they’re getting free Robux if they copy paste this text on the web inspector, lets not be ageist here
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
20 hours ago at 09:17 am
Though I don't use Opera browser regularly, it is good to see this. Better security is always welcome.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
22 hours ago at 07:30 am

This can never happen on iPhone and iPad. Open platforms have problems like this. Billions of iPhone and iPad users are safe from this type of malware
CVE-2026-43721: A malicious website may be able to silently hijack clipboard data.

Being a closed system doesn't make the system immune to security vulnerabilities.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
racerhomie Avatar
22 hours ago at 07:20 am
This can never happen on iPhone and iPad. Open platforms have problems like this. Billions of iPhone and iPad users are safe from this type of malware
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)