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ConfigureDefender utility for Windows 10
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<blockquote data-quote="Andy Ful" data-source="post: 971569" data-attributes="member: 32260"><p>Fortunately, my suspicion was not true. I suspected that running DumpStack.log from CmdLine could bypass Cloud delivered protection (no cloud backend) and mimi.exe was checked against cloud backend. But, on my computer, this is not true. I made a quick test:</p><ol> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">Disable Defender real-time protection.</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">Compile the EXE file and rename it to DumpStack.log.</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">Enable Defender real-time protection.</li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol">Run Dumpstack.log from Command Prompt.</li> </ol><p>I chose the file that included some suspicious code to trigger the cloud backend. I did not run the original EXE file, but only the Dumpstack.log. Anyway, I could see the normal Defender alert (scanning against cloud backend):</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]263510[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Andy Ful, post: 971569, member: 32260"] Fortunately, my suspicion was not true. I suspected that running DumpStack.log from CmdLine could bypass Cloud delivered protection (no cloud backend) and mimi.exe was checked against cloud backend. But, on my computer, this is not true. I made a quick test: [LIST=1] [*]Disable Defender real-time protection. [*]Compile the EXE file and rename it to DumpStack.log. [*]Enable Defender real-time protection. [*]Run Dumpstack.log from Command Prompt. [/LIST] I chose the file that included some suspicious code to trigger the cloud backend. I did not run the original EXE file, but only the Dumpstack.log. Anyway, I could see the normal Defender alert (scanning against cloud backend): [ATTACH type="full"]263510[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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