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Keyword: JS_WONKA
This Trojan may be hosted on a website and run when a user accesses the said website. This is the Trend Micro detection for Web pages that were compromised through the insertion of a certain IFRAME
This spyware may be dropped by other malware. It executes then deletes itself afterward. It connects to certain websites to send and receive information. Arrival Details This spyware may be dropped
This worm arrives by connecting affected removable drives to a system. It may be downloaded by other malware/grayware from remote sites. It is injected into all running processes to remain memory
This spyware arrives on a system as a file dropped by other malware or as a file downloaded unknowingly by users when visiting malicious sites. Arrival Details This spyware arrives on a system as a
This Trojan takes advantage of the following software vulnerability to drop malicious files: Adobe and Acrobat .PDF Vulnerability This Trojan arrives as an attachment to email messages spammed by
This Trojan may arrive on a system as a fake plugin for Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox . The URL redirections may then lead to advertisements or scam surveys that may ask for the user's mobile
This worm arrives by connecting affected removable drives to a system. It may be downloaded by other malware/grayware from remote sites. It is injected into all running processes to remain memory
This worm arrives by connecting affected removable drives to a system. It may be downloaded by other malware/grayware from remote sites. It is injected into all running processes to remain memory
This Trojan arrives as a component bundled with malware/grayware packages. Arrival Details This Trojan arrives as a component bundled with malware/grayware packages. Installation This Trojan drops
This backdoor arrives on a system as a file dropped by other malware or as a file downloaded unknowingly by users when visiting malicious sites. Arrival Details This backdoor arrives on a system as a
This Trojan may be unknowingly downloaded by a user while visiting malicious websites. It executes when a user accesses certain websites where it is hosted. It may be hosted on a website and run when
This Trojan may be unknowingly downloaded by a user while visiting malicious websites. It executes when a user accesses certain websites where it is hosted. Arrival Details This Trojan may be
This Trojan may be hosted on a website and run when a user accesses the said website. It takes advantage of software vulnerabilities to allow a remote user or malware/grayware to download files.
This is the Trend Micro detection for Web pages that were compromised through the insertion of a certain IFRAME tag. Once a user visits an affected Web page, this HTML script launches a hidden IFRAME
This Trojan may be hosted on a website and run when a user accesses the said website. It inserts an IFRAME tag that redirects users to certain URLs. However, as of this writing, the said sites are
This malware exploits the vulnerability in Microsoft XML Core Services, which prompted Microsoft to release a fix tool. To get a one-glance comprehensive view of the behavior of this Trojan, refer to
This is the Trend Micro detection for specially crafted .LNK files that are used to execute dropped copies of JS_MORPHE malware once this shortcut is accessed. This Trojan may be dropped by other
This is the Trend Micro detection for files that exhibit certain behaviors. This Trojan may be downloaded by other malware/grayware/spyware from remote sites. It may be hosted on a website and run
This Trojan may be dropped by other malware. It executes the files it drops, prompting the affected system to exhibit the malicious routines they contain. Arrival Details This Trojan may be dropped
GUMBLAR malware was spotted in 2009. Thousands of websites were compromised. These compromised sites hosted malicious scripts, detected as GUMBLAR. Apart from SQL injection, thousands of sites were