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<blockquote data-quote="Andy Ful" data-source="post: 1026364" data-attributes="member: 32260"><p>Yes.</p><p>Anyway, I think that for now, the Defender + SAC is enough for home users. Some basic SRP features are implemented in SAC, although they work only for files with MOTW (shortcuts, disk images, scripts, etc.).</p><p>So, users must be careful with flash drives where files cannot get MOTW due to the FAT32 format.</p><p>Another problem can be the attacks via documents (remote templates, add-ins, etc.) - the most popular attack is currently via MS Office XLL add-ins.</p><p>Many of these attacks will be mitigated by blocking unsigned executable payloads, but the malware can bypass SAC by using shellcode, reflective loading, signed executables, and some new techniques that will be probably developed in near future.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Andy Ful, post: 1026364, member: 32260"] Yes. Anyway, I think that for now, the Defender + SAC is enough for home users. Some basic SRP features are implemented in SAC, although they work only for files with MOTW (shortcuts, disk images, scripts, etc.). So, users must be careful with flash drives where files cannot get MOTW due to the FAT32 format. Another problem can be the attacks via documents (remote templates, add-ins, etc.) - the most popular attack is currently via MS Office XLL add-ins. Many of these attacks will be mitigated by blocking unsigned executable payloads, but the malware can bypass SAC by using shellcode, reflective loading, signed executables, and some new techniques that will be probably developed in near future. [/QUOTE]
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