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Hard_Configurator Tools
ConfigureDefender utility for Windows 10/11
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<blockquote data-quote="Andy Ful" data-source="post: 948634" data-attributes="member: 32260"><p>Defender's ASR rules in action. As an example, I have chosen the spam campaign delivering banking trojans (IcedID and Qbot). The scenario of the attack is very common in the wild.</p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://securelist.com/malicious-spam-campaigns-delivering-banking-trojans/102917/[/URL]</p><p></p><p>The malware delivery starts as usual via email attachment or the link to the hacked website. In both cases, the ZIP archive with an Excel document is downloaded to disk. When the user opens the document and allows macros (Excel 4.0), the malware loader is downloaded and executed by Excel (directly or via LolBin) - in both cases, the child process is created. So, the infection chain is stopped by the ASR rule "Block Office applications from creating child processes".</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Andy Ful, post: 948634, member: 32260"] Defender's ASR rules in action. As an example, I have chosen the spam campaign delivering banking trojans (IcedID and Qbot). The scenario of the attack is very common in the wild. [URL unfurl="true"]https://securelist.com/malicious-spam-campaigns-delivering-banking-trojans/102917/[/URL] The malware delivery starts as usual via email attachment or the link to the hacked website. In both cases, the ZIP archive with an Excel document is downloaded to disk. When the user opens the document and allows macros (Excel 4.0), the malware loader is downloaded and executed by Excel (directly or via LolBin) - in both cases, the child process is created. So, the infection chain is stopped by the ASR rule "Block Office applications from creating child processes". [/QUOTE]
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