Evasive Malware Threats on the Rise

Discussion in 'malware problems & news' started by guest, Sep 24, 2020.

  1. guest

    guest Guest

    Evasive Malware Threats on the Rise Despite Decline in Overall Attacks
    September 24, 2020
    https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/evasive-malware-rise-decline/
    WatchGuard's Internet Security Report - Q2 2020
    WatchGuard: WatchGuard’s Threat Lab Analyzes the Latest Malware and Internet Attacks

    WatchGuard Research Finds 12% Spike in Evasive Threats Despite Decrease in Overall Malware Volume
     
  2. Osaban

    Osaban Registered Member

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    I'm now absolutely convinced that as a private, average user not running a big business the chances of being attacked or infected are close to zero. For years I ran Avira Pro, lately Kaspersky I.S and now I've been with MS Defender for a few months, and there has never been one single detection, nothing, zilch. Not even one single FP for that matter, which is indicative how good the above mentioned AVs are in their scrutiny.

    I think there's been a change in the activities of hackers, many years ago infections were often destructive and spyware was rife in the hands of unscrupulous marketers, nowadays malware is actively directed to big business and to institutions which can afford large payments in untraceable bitcoin transactions. I spent quite a bit of money in security, specially from 2005 to 2013. In the future on a new machine, I will only buy a good backup/imaging program, that's it.
     
    Last edited: Sep 24, 2020
  3. EASTER

    EASTER Registered Member

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    True

    But back in Windows 98 the very second the internet connected that channel was loaded with malware and viruses that literally got inside a 98 PC in an instant. That is provided no AV was in the way. But even with those in limited supply and tauted to be effective were no match for junk consistently seeping into Internet Explorer.

    Thus the rush of third party security apps that better addressed the risks than even AV's of that age.
     
  4. guest

    guest Guest

    Layered security becomes critical as malware attacks rise
    September 25, 2020
    https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2020/09/25/malware-detections-q2-2020/
     
  5. itman

    itman Registered Member

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    Amazing how hackers discover stuff like this. I never realized that there was a default password for Excel documents.
     
  6. stapp

    stapp Global Moderator

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  7. Rasheed187

    Rasheed187 Registered Member

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    It depends a bit on your computing practices, but yes as a home user it should be quite easy to stay safe. I also think that most active users on this forum are using security tools more as a hobby, I don't think they are THAT worried about malware. But anyway, here is another article about threats that Cisco encounters the most on business PC's, file-less malware remains a big threat.

    https://blogs.cisco.com/security/threat-landscape-trends-endpoint-security
     
  8. wat0114

    wat0114 Registered Member

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    Except those who are click-happy in phishing emails, tricked into installing a "Flash plugin" to watch a video, or addicted to torrent downloads.

    Agreed.
     
  9. Rasheed187

    Rasheed187 Registered Member

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    Yes exactly, you will always have people that will be fooled by this. But even then, you would think that most AV's should be able to protect them? But because lots of people will now work from home, I do expect that they will be targeted way more. Because the problem is that home-PC's might now be an entry point to business networks.
     
  10. wat0114

    wat0114 Registered Member

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    I would think many, if not most, people working from home would be using a COE-assigned device to work from, running an enterprise level antivirus and other security measures more robust than those found on typical home devices. Yes, I agree a good consumer AV should likely detect the majority of threats triggered by click-happy souls :D
     
    Last edited: Oct 6, 2020
  11. guest

    guest Guest

    Stegomalware Surge – Attackers Using File, Video, Image & Others To Hide Malware
    August 8, 2022
    Cyble: Stegomalware – Identifying Possible Attack Vectors
     
  12. guest

    guest Guest

    RAT malware campaign tries to evade detection using polyglot files
    By Bill Toulas @billtoulas - January 12, 2023
    Deep Instinct: Malicious JARs and Polyglot files: “Who do you think you JAR?”
     
  13. guest

    guest Guest

    Hackers use Golang source code interpreter to evade detection
    By Bill Toulas @billtoulas - January 24, 2023
    SentinelLabs: DragonSpark | Attacks Evade Detection with SparkRAT and Golang Source Code Interpretation
     
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