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Tag: filelessmalware

5 articles

Living Off The Land: Stunning, Risky Evasion Techniques

Living Off The Land: Stunning, Risky Evasion Techniques

Attackers are quietly blending in by weaponizing legitimate — often obscure — system tools and even image files to evade detection, forcing defenders to rethink the assumption that “known-good” equals safe. To stay ahead, organizations must expand telemetry, tighten allowlisting, and hunt for suspicious misuse of everyday binaries before trust becomes a vulnerability.

Analyst 207
fileless malware: Deadly Exclusive Stealth Threat

fileless malware: Deadly Exclusive Stealth Threat

Imagine fighting a ghost that leaves no footprint — attackers are running AsyncRAT entirely in memory, hiding behind trusted Windows tools like PowerShell and rundll32. Luckily, better runtime visibility, behavioral EDR and stronger identity controls can help defenders spot and stop these stealthy, fileless intrusions.

Analyst 207
fileless malware: Devastating Exclusive Threat

fileless malware: Devastating Exclusive Threat

Researchers say a Chinese-linked APT used fileless malware to hide in a Philippine military contractor’s memory, quietly siphoning sensitive data while evading traditional detection. The breach is a wake-up call to move beyond signature-based defenses, tighten access controls, and shore up the defense supply chain.

Analyst 207
ConnectWise ScreenConnect Risky Exploit: Stunning AsyncRAT

ConnectWise ScreenConnect Risky Exploit: Stunning AsyncRAT

Imagine your trusted remote-admin tool becoming the very doorway attackers use to steal credentials and siphon crypto—researchers found ConnectWise ScreenConnect sessions abused to run a fleshless, in-memory VBScript loader that dropped AsyncRAT to harvest keys, keystrokes, and wallets. Harden RMM access, monitor session scripts, and assume compromise—because when legitimate tooling is weaponized, detection needs to get smarter fast.

Analyst 207
MixShell malware: Exclusive Risky Supply-Chain Threat

MixShell malware: Exclusive Risky Supply-Chain Threat

Attackers behind the ZipLine campaign are skipping noisy phishing emails and weaponizing corporate “Contact Us” forms to trick procurement staff into running an in-memory, fileless loader called MixShell that evades detection and targets U.S. supply-chain manufacturers. Treat unexpected vendor downloads with skepticism, verify requests through known channels, and beef up memory-level detection—because human trust is now a favorite attack vector.

Analyst 207