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  2. Malware analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malware_Analysis

    Malware analysis is the study or process of determining the functionality, origin and potential impact of a given malware sample such as a virus, worm, trojan horse, rootkit, or backdoor. [1] Malware or malicious software is any computer software intended to harm the host operating system or to steal sensitive data from users, organizations or ...

  3. Malware research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malware_research

    Research in combining static and dynamic malware analysis techniques is also currently being conducted in an effort to minimize the shortcomings of both. Studies by researchers such as Islam et al. [13] are working to integrate static and dynamic techniques in order to better analyze and classify malware and malware variants.

  4. Stegomalware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stegomalware

    The Europol-supported CUING initiative monitors the use of steganography in malware. [ 7 ] The methods used by stegomalware have been used in a number of attacks: Duqu (to hide malicious payloads in JPEG images for stealthy data exfiltration), Zeus/Zbot (to mask command-and-control (C&C) traffic inside image files), Waterbug (to inject ...

  5. Cyber threat hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyber_threat_hunting

    Situational-Awareness Driven: "Crown Jewel analysis, enterprise risk assessments, company- or employee-level trends" Intelligence-Driven: "Threat intelligence reports, threat intelligence feeds, malware analysis, vulnerability scans" The analysts research their hypothesis by going through vast amounts of data about the network.

  6. Capture the flag (cybersecurity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capture_the_flag_(cyber...

    CTFs have been shown to be an effective way to improve cybersecurity education through gamification. [6] There are many examples of CTFs designed to teach cybersecurity skills to a wide variety of audiences, including PicoCTF, organized by the Carnegie Mellon CyLab, which is oriented towards high school students, and Arizona State University supported pwn.college.

  7. MISP Threat Sharing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MISP_Threat_Sharing

    MISP Threat Sharing (MISP), Malware Information Sharing Platform is an open source threat intelligence platform. The project develops utilities and documentation for more effective threat intelligence, by sharing indicators of compromise. [2] There are several organizations who run MISP instances, who are listed on the website. [3]

  8. ClamAV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ClamAV

    ClamAV (antivirus) is a free software, cross-platform antimalware toolkit able to detect many types of malware, including viruses.It was developed for Unix and has third party versions available for AIX, BSD, HP-UX, Linux, macOS, OpenVMS, OSF (Tru64), Solaris and Haiku.

  9. MalwareMustDie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MalwareMustDie

    MalwareMustDie is a registered nonprofit organization as a medium for IT professionals and security researchers gathered to form a work flow to reduce malware infection in the internet. The group is known for their malware analysis blog. [3] They have a list [4] of Linux malware research and botnet