Keyword: JS_INJECT
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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. Arrival Details This Trojan arrives on a system as a
This malware 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
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 deletes itself after execution. Arrival Details This
remote malicious user: Update itself Download and execute files List active processes Perform remote shell Execute file Keylog Capture Screenshot Start VNC Inject to process Receive configuration data It
inject a character into the CSS parameters to convert the script into two separate lines for further rendering on a Web browser's CSS engine. This allowed cybercriminals to create a code that allowed them
This Trojan may be dropped by other malware. It executes the dropped file(s). As a result, malicious routines of the dropped files are exhibited on the affected system. Arrival Details This Trojan
This JavaScript has received attention from independent media sources and/or other security firms. To get a one-glance comprehensive view of the behavior of this Trojan, refer to the Threat Diagram
This Trojan Spy arrives on a system as a file dropped by other malware or as a file downloaded unknowingly by users when visiting malicious sites. It connects to certain websites to send and receive
This Trojan Spy arrives on a system as a file dropped by other malware or as a file downloaded unknowingly by users when visiting malicious sites. It steals certain information from the system and/or
attacks. The plugin removes this as it will will inject script that does not belong to Facebook . It runs a JavaScript code when users visit Facebook . When users go on Facebook , the plugin will run a
This Potentially Unwanted Application arrives on a system as a file dropped by other malware or as a file downloaded unknowingly by users when visiting malicious sites. It modifies the Internet
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 deletes the initially executed copy of itself.
traffic Add infected host to botnet Download updated configuration file Download and execute modules (VNC) Inject itself to web browsers (i.e. IE, Chrome, Firefox) Backdoor:Win32/Drixed.J (Microsoft),
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 deletes itself after execution. Arrival Details This
user: Connect and disconnect to a named pipe Escalate privileges Execute arbitrary commands Impersonate tokens Inject code into processes Manage directories (Create, Remove, Set Directory) Manage files
privileges Execute arbitrary commands Impersonate tokens Inject code into processes Manage directories (Create, Remove, Set Directory) Manage files (List, Create, Delete, Modify, Rename, Copy) Manage processes
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. Arrival Details This Trojan arrives on a system as a
routines. This backdoor has the following capabilities: Capture screen shots, webcam, audio Delete, search, and upload files Download and inject remote codes to legitimate processes Log keystrokes and active
This Trojan modifies HTTP traffic on the local network in order to inject a malicious script on the HTML page whenever a user visits a website. It utilizes WinPcap libraries in order to execute the
This {malware/spyware type} has received attention from independent media sources and/or other security firms. To get a one-glance comprehensive view of the behavior of this Trojan, refer to the