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192 entries found. Displaying page 5 of 10.
Updated on Mar 17, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.PG!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Mar 21, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.PA!rfn describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Mar 24, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.AR!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Mar 31, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.PH!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Apr 06, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.PI!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Apr 29, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.YA!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Aug 20, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.PB!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Aug 21, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.BA!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Aug 28, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.VA!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Sep 07, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.BC!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Sep 08, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.DD!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Sep 11, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.BD!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Sep 14, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.BE!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Sep 18, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.BF!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Sep 19, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.DG!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Sep 22, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.DH!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Oct 09, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.DO!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Oct 09, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.DP!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe
Updated on Nov 18, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.BA!rfn describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk. 

Alert level: severe
Updated on Nov 18, 2020

Ransom:Win32/Filecoder.BB!MTB describes a diverse family of ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) payloads designed to encrypt data on infected Windows devices and extort payment for decryption. This classification represents a broad malicious ecosystem where various threat actors customize and deploy the malware against organizations in sectors such as healthcare, education, and manufacturing. The threat originates from compromised Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) connections, phishing campaigns, or secondary payloads dropped by other malware. Because it operates under a service model, the Filecoder constantly evolves, with different versions sharing core code while using varied delivery and persistence techniques to remain a persistent risk.  

The “!MTB” suffix refers to Machine Threat Behavior, which indicates that this trojan was detected using behavioral analysis or machine learning models. Instead of relying on a static signature (like a known file hash), the antivirus engine identified the program's actions, sequence of operations, or code patterns as malicious. These patterns are consistent with the known behavior of the Filecoder family.  

Alert level: severe