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Keyword: usojan.linux.cve20165195.c
This Trojan may arrive bundled with malware packages as a malware component. It may be hosted on a website and run when a user accesses the said website. It requires its main component to
This Trojan may arrive bundled with malware packages as a malware component. It may be hosted on a website and run when a user accesses the said website. It requires its main component to
This Trojan arrives as a component bundled with malware/grayware packages. It may be hosted on a website and run when a user accesses the said website. It executes the downloaded files. As a result,
This Trojan arrives as an attachment to email messages spammed by other malware/grayware or malicious users. It executes the dropped file(s). As a result, malicious routines of the dropped files are
This Trojan arrives as an attachment to email messages spammed by other malware/grayware or malicious users. It executes the dropped file(s). As a result, malicious routines of the dropped files are
This .PDF file disguises itself as a harmless document. This Trojan arrives on a system as a file dropped by other malware or as a file downloaded unknowingly by users when visiting malicious sites.
This malware has received attention from independent media sources and/or other security firms. It exploits CVE-2009-3129 to drop another malware that then drops a backdoor application. The backdoor
This Trojan may arrive bundled with malware packages as a malware component. It may be hosted on a website and run when a user accesses the said website. Arrival Details This Trojan may arrive
Trend Micro has flagged this malware as noteworthy due to the increased potential for damage, propagation, or both, that it possesses. Specifically, it exploits an unknown vulnerability in Adobe
This Trojan may be downloaded by other malware/grayware/spyware from remote sites. It may be unknowingly downloaded by a user while visiting malicious websites. It takes advantage of software
This Worm does not have any backdoor routine. It executes the dropped file(s). As a result, malicious routines of the dropped files are exhibited on the affected system. Arrival Details This malware
This Trojan arrives on a system as a file dropped by other malware or as a file downloaded unknowingly by users when visiting malicious sites. It does not have any file infection routine. It does not
This Trojan arrives as an attachment to email messages spammed by other malware/grayware or malicious users. It executes the dropped file(s). As a result, malicious routines of the dropped files are
This Trojan arrives on a system as a file dropped by other malware or as a file downloaded unknowingly by users when visiting malicious sites. It does not have any file infection routine. It does not
This Trojan arrives on a system as a file dropped by other malware or as a file downloaded unknowingly by users when visiting malicious sites. It exploits a vulnerability identified as in a zero-day
CVE-2010-0013 Directory traversal vulnerability in slp.c in the MSN protocol plugin in libpurple in Pidgin 2.6.4 and Adium 1.3.8 allows remote attackers to read arbitrary files via a .. (dot dot) in
CVE-2007-4743 The original patch for CVE-2007-3999 in svc_auth_gss.c in the RPCSEC_GSS RPC library in MIT Kerberos 5 (krb5) 1.4 through 1.6.2, as used by the Kerberos administration daemon (kadmind)
CVE-2009-2694 The msn_slplink_process_msg function in libpurple/protocols/msn/slplink.c in libpurple, as used in Pidgin (formerly Gaim) before 2.5.9 and Adium 1.3.5 and earlier, allows remote
CVE-2003-0213 cve: ctrlpacket.c in PoPToP PPTP server before 1.1.4-b3 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via a length field of 0 or 1, which causes a negative value to be fed into a
CVE-2008-5036 Stack-based buffer overflow in VideoLAN VLC media player 0.9.x before 0.9.6 might allow user-assisted attackers to execute arbitrary code via an an invalid RealText (rt) subtitle file,