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Messi’s Argentina vs Cape Verde and a Historic Egypt-Australia Clash Friday
MIAMI — The 2026 World Cup’s round of 32 reaches its final day Friday, with three matches completing the first knockout stage of an expanded 48-team tournament that has already produced its share of upsets, records and memorable moments. The headliner is unmistakably the late-afternoon showdown in Miami, where reigning champion Argentina and the record-setting Lionel Messi face a Cape Verde side that has captivated fans worldwide with one of the most improbable group stage runs in recent tournament history.
But Friday’s card begins in Dallas at 2 p.m. ET, where Australia takes on Egypt in a match carrying genuine historical weight for both sides. Neither nation has ever won a World Cup knockout match, making the Dallas opener a first for one of them regardless of what happens. Australia is playing in just its third-ever knockout round, having lost twice in agonizing fashion, once to Italy in 2006 on a stoppage-time winner and once to Argentina in 2022. Egypt’s appearance in the knockout stage is only the second in its World Cup history, with the first coming in 1934 under a single-elimination format with no group stage whatsoever.
Egypt enters the match with significant injury uncertainty surrounding its most important player. Captain and all-time leading scorer Mohamed Salah was forced off in the 57th minute of Egypt’s group stage finale against Iran with a hamstring strain. Coach Hossam Hassan has expressed optimism about Salah’s availability, but without the former Liverpool forward, Egypt’s offense has little of the individual quality needed to break down a resolute Australian defensive shape. Compounding the concern, left-back Ahmed Fatouh and central defender Mohamed Abdelmonem are both listed as doubtful, leaving Egypt potentially depleted across multiple positions of the backline.
Australia under coach Tony Popovic has not been a high-scoring team through the group stage. The Socceroos scored twice in their opening 2-0 win over Türkiye but were then shut out in a 2-0 loss to the United States and earned a 0-0 draw against Paraguay without finding the net. That scoring drought reflects a team comfortable playing deep and looking to capitalize on counter-attacking opportunities rather than imposing possession-based football on opponents, a style that could prove well-suited to navigating Egypt’s injury-diminished lineup if the Australians can keep things tight defensively.
One of the match’s defining storylines involves who is standing in goal for Australia. Shortly before the tournament’s first match, coach Popovic made the surprising call to bench veteran captain Matthew Ryan in favor of Patrick Beach, a largely inexperienced goalkeeper who plays domestically for Melbourne City and had only five international caps entering the tournament. Beach delivered a stunning performance in the Türkiye victory and added a second clean sheet against Paraguay, quickly justifying the unconventional selection. He is likely to be tested early and often if Salah plays, and his form on the day may ultimately determine the outcome.
The second match, in Miami at 6 p.m. ET, frames itself as the round’s most one-sided matchup on paper and also its most narratively compelling underdog story. Cape Verde, representing an archipelago nation of just 525,000 people off the west coast of Africa, advanced to the knockout stage without losing a single group stage match. The Blue Sharks drew 0-0 with Spain, 2-2 with Uruguay and 0-0 with Saudi Arabia, finishing second in their group. Their opening stalemate against Spain, still one of the tournament’s most technically refined sides, announced Cape Verde as a team organized far beyond expectations, built around a disciplined 4-5-1 formation that sits deep and offers opponents almost no space between the lines.
Central to Cape Verde’s run has been 40-year-old goalkeeper Vozinha, who has been one of the tournament’s most celebrated individual performers, particularly during the Spain match, where his command of the penalty area and shot-stopping quality kept the scoreline level against one of the world’s leading attacking lineups. At 40, Vozinha is a story in himself, a late-career achievement that connects Cape Verde’s remarkable group stage to the personal arc of an individual who was never expected to be here.
Against Argentina, however, Cape Verde faces a different order of challenge than anything the group stage produced. La Albiceleste has won all three of its group stage games by multi-goal margins and have played with the self-assurance of a team operating with a clear sense of purpose. They have won their last 10 competitive matches and enter Friday as the clearest favorite of any remaining team in the tournament, a status reflected in betting markets where Argentina sit at odds as heavy as negative 694.
The player around whom everything revolves is Messi, a point that requires no elaboration yet deserves acknowledgment given what the 39-year-old has already produced in this tournament. He has scored in every group match, co-leads the tournament with six goals alongside France’s Kylian Mbappé and has now scored 19 career World Cup goals, the most in the history of the men’s game, a record he set earlier at this tournament. The Blue Sharks kept Spain scoreless over 90 minutes, an achievement of genuine defensive organization and collective discipline, but Argentina’s attack beyond Messi, including the striker partnership with Lautaro Martínez and the creative supporting cast across the front line, presents a dimension of danger Spain’s group stage lineup did not.
A cloud has settled over the Cape Verde camp this week, however. Captain Ryan Mendes is under a criminal investigation in New Zealand following allegations that he raped a woman in March. How the team’s federation and coaching staff have addressed the matter internally has not been fully disclosed publicly, though the news adds an uncomfortable dimension to what had been a purely joyful story for a nation experiencing its first-ever World Cup knockout appearance.
Friday’s final match, at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City at 9:30 p.m. ET, features Colombia against Ghana, with the South American side entering as the clear favorite against a Ghanaian team that has relied on deep defensive structure and a deliberate, disciplined game management style to advance from what was widely viewed as a difficult group. Colombia’s emerging quality up front makes them the likely victor in what is expected to be a tactically cautious contest.
Business
At Close of Business podcast July 3 2026
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Business
Dangerous New Mac Malware PamStealer Disguises Itself as a Popular Clipboard App to Steal Your Passwords
SAN FRANCISCO — A sophisticated new strain of Mac malware is targeting users of one of the most popular third-party clipboard management utilities on macOS, impersonating the app through fake websites and disguised installer files to steal login passwords, according to a threat report published by mobile device management and security firm Jamf Threat Labs.
The malware, which Jamf researchers have named PamStealer, is being distributed through websites designed to mimic the legitimate website of Maccy, a widely used free open-source clipboard history tracker. Users who land on these fraudulent sites and attempt to download what they believe is a legitimate copy of the application instead receive malicious files engineered to compromise their system silently and extract sensitive authentication credentials.
PamStealer’s delivery mechanism relies on AppleScript files disguised as legitimate Maccy installer packages and distributed within disk images, a format Mac users commonly associate with trusted software installations. When a user opens and attempts to run the file, the script triggers a payload chain that begins tracking information on the targeted Mac and transmits collected data to an external threat actor controlling the attack.
The name PamStealer derives from the specific technique the malware uses to extract and validate a victim’s login password through macOS Pluggable Authentication Modules, known as PAM, the system-level authentication framework built into Apple’s operating system that handles credential verification across a wide range of login and privilege escalation scenarios.
What distinguishes PamStealer from earlier generations of Mac malware, according to Jamf’s analysis, is the technical sophistication of its execution chain and its deliberate effort to minimize the signals that conventional detection tools would typically catch. The malware does not use commonly flagged shell commands such as curl or zsh, which many Mac security tools have been trained to treat with suspicion. Instead, the AppleScript payload executes a self-contained JavaScript for Automation downloader that retrieves and stages the malicious payload using native Objective-C application programming interfaces, tools that are part of macOS’s own legitimate software development framework and therefore far less likely to trigger defensive alerts.
A Rust-based second-stage payload follows the initial download, with the combination of techniques producing what Jamf’s researchers described as a notably quiet and difficult-to-detect attack chain.
“Together, these behaviors illustrate how commodity macOS stealers continue to evolve, adopting quieter execution chains and native implementations that reduce traditional detection opportunities while remaining compatible with standard macOS features,” Jamf wrote in its report.
The researchers further noted that while disk images and AppleScript-based malware have both been established components of the Mac threat landscape for years, PamStealer represents a meaningful evolution in how those elements are combined. By pairing them with a local credential validation process through PAM rather than transmitting password attempts outward for external verification, the malware avoids generating the kind of outbound network traffic that endpoint detection tools often monitor for signs of malicious activity. The credential is tested locally against the Mac’s own authentication system before being exfiltrated, reducing the overall noise of the attack and making the infection harder to identify through conventional monitoring.
The Maccy application itself is not compromised. The malware is entirely external to the legitimate software and works solely by exploiting user trust in the Maccy brand and the app’s wide adoption among Mac power users. Maccy has built a following among enthusiasts and professionals because it provides clipboard history functionality that Apple only began offering natively in macOS Tahoe through an update to Spotlight, arriving years after third-party developers had already built dedicated tools to fill the gap. The combination of strong name recognition and a user base comfortable with installing non-App Store software made Maccy a strategically attractive brand for threat actors to impersonate.
To protect themselves from PamStealer specifically, Maccy users should only download the application directly from the official Maccy website, maccy.app, or from the application’s official GitHub repository. Both the official website and the GitHub page carry explicit disclaimers stating that maccy.app is the only official website for the application, a warning that the developer has apparently added in direct response to the emergence of impersonation sites targeting their user base. Any other website distributing a file claiming to be Maccy should be treated as suspect.
More broadly, the threat underscores a set of security habits that Apple, security researchers and enterprise IT teams consistently recommend to Mac users regardless of which application a specific attack happens to target. The safest pathway for obtaining Mac software remains the Mac App Store, where Apple reviews applications before making them available for download and applies a layer of technical sandboxing that limits what even legitimate apps can access on a user’s system. Software obtained directly from a developer through their official website carries somewhat more risk, though that risk is manageable when users take care to verify they are on the correct domain and not a lookalike site.
Users who receive messages containing links to software downloads from unfamiliar or unexpected sources should avoid clicking those links directly. A recommended approach involves Control-clicking any link or button to copy the actual URL before visiting it, then pasting the address into a text editor to inspect the full destination address before proceeding. Links in emails or text messages that claim to lead to known, trusted software download pages are a common vector for delivering malware through exactly the kind of impersonation technique PamStealer employs.
Mac users who want to assess their existing security posture can also consider running one of several reputable third-party Mac security tools that scan for known malware signatures and monitor for unusual system behavior, though Jamf’s report suggests that PamStealer’s design specifically targets detection gaps in conventional tools, making behavioral awareness and careful download hygiene the most reliable defenses for now.
PamStealer’s sophistication reflects a broader and well-documented trend in which Mac-targeted malware has grown significantly more advanced in recent years as the platform’s user base and commercial profile have expanded, attracting greater attention from financially motivated threat actors who once focused almost exclusively on Windows systems. The days when Mac users could rely on relative security through obscurity are long past, and the evolution documented in Jamf’s PamStealer report offers a clear illustration of why.
Business
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Emerald Resources awards MACA $562m work
Shares in Emerald Resources have gone up after the West Perth-based company announced a $562 million deal for its gold project.
Business
KeyCorp Stock: Focus On Investor Event Disclosures And New Buyback Plan (NYSE:KEY)
The Value Pendulum is an Asian equity market specialist with over a decade of experience on both the buy and sell sides.He is the author of the investing group Asia Value & Moat Stocks, providing ideas for value investors seeking investment opportunities listed in Asia, with a particular focus on the Hong Kong market. He hunts for deep value balance sheet bargains and wide moat stocks and provides a range of watch lists with monthly updates within his investing group.
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
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