Search Evasion Techniques
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Ctrl+Inject Process Manipulating
The "Control Signal Handler Callback" technique involves injecting malicious code into a process by using a callback function for control signal handlers. When a control signal, such as Ctrl+C, is received by a process, the system creates a new thread to execute a function to handle the signal. This thread is typically created by the legitimate process "csrss.exe" in the …
Checking Malware Name Sandbox Evasion Anti-Monitoring
Malware can use various techniques to evade detection by security analysts and researchers. One such technique is to check the name of the malware sample before fully executing on the infected machine. If the sample has been renamed to a blacklisted name, such as "malware.exe" or "sample.exe", or even with the file hash, the malware can detect this and change …
ConsoleWindowClass Process Manipulating
One method that has been used to achieve process injection is by manipulating the User Data of a window object.
The User Data of a window is a small amount of memory that is usually used to store a pointer to a class object. This memory can be set using the SetWindowLongPtr
API and the GWLP_USERDATA parameter. In the …
Killing Windows Event Log Anti-Forensic
Killing the Windows Event Log is a technique used by malware to prevent security professionals from detecting and analyzing it. Svchost.exe is a process that manages services on Windows operating systems.
By grouping multiple services into a single process, Svchost.exe conserves computing resources and reduces resource consumption. However, this also means that Svchost.exe manages the Event Log service, which …
Access Token Manipulation: Parent PID Spoofing Process Manipulating Defense Evasion [Mitre]
Adversaries may spoof the parent process identifier (PPID) of a new process to evade process-monitoring defenses or to elevate privileges. New processes are typically spawned directly from their parent, or calling, process unless explicitly specified.
One way of explicitly assigning the PPID of a new process is via the CreateProcess
API call, which supports a parameter that defines the …
Shellcode Injection via CreateThreadpoolWait Process Manipulating
Shellcode injection is a technique used by malware to execute arbitrary code within the context of a targeted process. One method of achieving this is through the use of the CreateThreadpoolWait
function, which is a part of the Windows thread pool API.
In the context of shellcode injection, CreateThreadpoolWait
is used to create a wait object that is associated …
Unloading Sysmon Driver Anti-Monitoring
Sysmon is a tool that can be used to monitor system activity on Windows systems. It records various types of events, such as process creation, network connections, and registry changes, and stores them in the Windows Event Log. Security analysts can use this information to detect and investigate malicious activity on a system.
One way that malware can evade …
NLS Code Injection Through Registry Process Manipulating
Dll injection through registry modification of NLS code page ID is a technique used by malware to inject a malicious DLL into a process by modifying the NLS code page ID in the registry.
There are two ways to accomplish this technique: 1. Calling the SetThreadLocale
function and setting up an export function named NlsDllCodePageTranslation
, where the main …
Dirty Vanity Process Manipulating
Dirty Vanity is a process injection technique that exploits the Windows forking (process reflection and snapshotting) feature to inject code into a new process.
It uses the RtlCreateProcessReflection
or NtCreateProcess[Ex]
primitives, along with the PROCESS_VM_OPERATION
, PROCESS_CREATE_THREAD
, and PROCESS_DUP_HANDLE
flags to reflect and execute code in a new process.
The technique also makes use of various methods, …
Domain Member Sandbox Evasion
This technique determines if a host is a member of an Active Directory Domain without API calls. It helps prevent malicious payload execution in enterprise sandboxes that are not members of an Active Directory domain. The validation is done by checking the "LoggonServer" and "ComputerName" environment variables. If the host is logged into a domain controller, the "LoggonServer" value will …