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This new threat infects devices with a dozen malware at once
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<blockquote data-quote="kailyn" data-source="post: 1091728" data-attributes="member: 113651"><p>The attack method is not ridiculous. But not knowing that the method had been used for decades is ridiculous. Kraken Labs is the one that does not know malware history. And the article author just repeated what Kraken Labs fed to him.</p><p></p><p>There are still PUAs and PUPs that download multiple malicious software. The method of getting malware onto user systems and gaining persistence via confusion or subterfuge never ended. Rootkits of the days of old did the same thing but without being detected. Back then they thought "I have a much better chance of persistence if I install multiple malicious modules versus a single one." Sort of like a 5 year old that figures out they can carry a lot more sand with a bigger bucket. That level of thinking.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="kailyn, post: 1091728, member: 113651"] The attack method is not ridiculous. But not knowing that the method had been used for decades is ridiculous. Kraken Labs is the one that does not know malware history. And the article author just repeated what Kraken Labs fed to him. There are still PUAs and PUPs that download multiple malicious software. The method of getting malware onto user systems and gaining persistence via confusion or subterfuge never ended. Rootkits of the days of old did the same thing but without being detected. Back then they thought "I have a much better chance of persistence if I install multiple malicious modules versus a single one." Sort of like a 5 year old that figures out they can carry a lot more sand with a bigger bucket. That level of thinking. [/QUOTE]
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