{
	"id": "005ef2fb-bf83-4178-a27d-1a59c7a7a6d2",
	"created_at": "2026-04-06T00:21:47.631685Z",
	"updated_at": "2026-04-10T03:38:19.200205Z",
	"deleted_at": null,
	"sha1_hash": "1f9f95c1c2b97238c2abb20aa29949f874df15b6",
	"title": "MAR-10288834-3.v1 – North Korean Trojan: PEBBLEDASH | CISA",
	"llm_title": "",
	"authors": "",
	"file_creation_date": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
	"file_modification_date": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
	"file_size": 63055,
	"plain_text": "MAR-10288834-3.v1 – North Korean Trojan: PEBBLEDASH | CISA\r\nPublished: 2020-05-12 · Archived: 2026-04-05 13:48:02 UTC\r\nNotification\r\nThis report is provided \"as is\" for informational purposes only. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) does not\r\nprovide any warranties of any kind regarding any information contained herein. The DHS does not endorse any commercial\r\nproduct or service referenced in this bulletin or otherwise.\r\nThis document is marked TLP:WHITE--Disclosure is not limited. Sources may use TLP:WHITE when information carries\r\nminimal or no foreseeable risk of misuse, in accordance with applicable rules and procedures for public release. Subject to\r\nstandard copyright rules, TLP:WHITE information may be distributed without restriction. For more information on the\r\nTraffic Light Protocol (TLP), see http://www.us-cert.gov/tlp.\r\nSummary\r\nDescription\r\nThis Malware Analysis Report (MAR) is the result of analytic efforts between the Department of Homeland Security (DHS),\r\nthe Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the Department of Defense (DoD). Working with U.S. Government partners,\r\nDHS, FBI, and DoD identified Trojan malware variants used by the North Korean government. This malware variant has\r\nbeen identified as PEBBLEDASH. The U.S. Government refers to malicious cyber activity by the North Korean government\r\nas HIDDEN COBRA. For more information on HIDDEN COBRA activity, visit https[:]//www[.]us-cert.gov/hiddencobra.\r\nFBI has high confidence that HIDDEN COBRA actors are using malware variants in conjunction with proxy servers to\r\nmaintain a presence on victim networks and to further network exploitation. DHS, FBI, and DoD are distributing this MAR\r\nto enable network defense and reduce exposure to North Korean government malicious cyber activity.\r\nThis MAR includes malware descriptions related to HIDDEN COBRA, suggested response actions and recommended\r\nmitigation techniques. Users or administrators should flag activity associated with the malware and report the activity to the\r\nCybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) or the FBI Cyber Watch (CyWatch), and give the activity the\r\nhighest priority for enhanced mitigation.\r\nThis report looks at a full-featured beaconing implant. This sample uses FakeTLS for session authentication and for network\r\nencoding utilizing RC4. It has the capability to download, upload, delete, and execute files; enable Windows CLI access;\r\ncreate and terminate processes; and perform target system enumeration.\r\nFor a downloadable copy of IOCs, see MAR-10288834-3.v1.stix.\r\nSubmitted Files (1)\r\naab2868a6ebc6bdee5bd12104191db9fc1950b30bcf96eab99801624651e77b6 (D2DE01858417FA3B580B3A95857847...)\r\nIPs (1)\r\n112.217.108.138\r\nFindings\r\naab2868a6ebc6bdee5bd12104191db9fc1950b30bcf96eab99801624651e77b6\r\nTags\r\nrootkittrojan\r\nDetails\r\nName D2DE01858417FA3B580B3A95857847D5\r\nSize 167937 bytes\r\nType PE32 executable (GUI) Intel 80386, for MS Windows\r\nMD5 d2de01858417fa3b580b3a95857847d5\r\nhttps://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/analysis-reports/ar20-133c\r\nPage 1 of 5\n\nSHA1 2c879a1d4b6334c59ac5f11c2038d273d334befe\r\nSHA256 aab2868a6ebc6bdee5bd12104191db9fc1950b30bcf96eab99801624651e77b6\r\nSHA512 220c74af533f4565c4d6f0b4a4ac37c4c6e6238eba22d976a8c28889381a7d920e29077287144ec71f60e5a0b3f3780b6c688e34b8b63092\r\nssdeep 3072:LH+Sv//jDG2TJVw2URyELc1VVA9Rznhy7i+2JYI3mX2nwvjbtdKQ:qSn/jDGtUEWgE792nmX2Eb3\r\nEntropy 6.131834\r\nAntivirus\r\nAhnlab Trojan/Win32.Akdoor\r\nAvira TR/Fuery.eipis\r\nBitDefender Trojan.GenericKD.5147779\r\nESET a variant of Win32/NukeSped.G trojan\r\nEmsisoft Trojan.GenericKD.5147779 (B)\r\nFilseclab Rootkit.Agent.eki.zwum.mg\r\nIkarus Trojan.Win32.NukeSped\r\nNANOAV Trojan.Win32.Fuery.ephjck\r\nSymantec Trojan Horse\r\nVirusBlokAda BScope.Trojan.Dynamer\r\nZillya! Trojan.NukeSped.Win32.4\r\nYARA Rules\r\nrule CISA_3P_10135536_02 : rc4_key_2\r\n{\r\n   meta:\r\n       Author = \"CISA Trusted Third Party\"\r\n       Incident = \"10135536\"\r\n       Date = \"2018-04-19\"\r\n       Actor = \"Hidden Cobra\"\r\n       Category = \"n/a\"\r\n       Family = \"n/a\"\r\n       Description = \"n/a\"\r\n   strings:\r\n       $s1 = { c6 ?? ?? 79 c6 ?? ?? e1 c6 ?? ?? 0a c6 ?? ?? 5d c6 ?? ?? 87 c6 ?? ?? 7d c6 ?? ?? 9f c6 ?? ?? f7 c6 ?? ?? 5d\r\nc6 ?? ?? 12 c6 ?? ?? 2e c6 ?? ?? 11 c6 ?? ?? 65 c6 ?? ?? ac c6 ?? ?? e3 c6 ?? ?? 25 }\r\n       $s2 = { c7 ?? ?? 79 e1 0a 5d c7 ?? ?? 87 7d 9f f7 c7 ?? ?? 5d 12 2e 11 c7 ?? ?? 65 ac e3 25 }\r\n   condition:\r\n       (uint16(0) == 0x5A4D and uint16(uint32(0x3c)) == 0x4550) and any of them\r\n}\r\nssdeep Matches\r\n100 d620d88dfe1dbc0b407d0c3010ff18963e8bb1534f32998322f5a16746a1d0a6\r\nPE Metadata\r\nCompile Date 2017-05-10 08:32:48-04:00\r\nImport Hash 244a466b5f07e9bef21f34a777edebc2\r\nPE Sections\r\nhttps://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/analysis-reports/ar20-133c\r\nPage 2 of 5\n\nMD5 Name Raw Size Entropy\r\n735665170a22a6b60e78ba64be8f525a header 4096 0.685116\r\n03861d6eb2f7ce7eb5a2c20dae40d62b .text 135168 6.307038\r\nbfcf9ded9905d8f7d6afdcf03737a029 .rdata 12288 5.094334\r\n16cb2fb46f6bf6aaae5d9daf38d0f5d4 .data 12288 5.001095\r\n14f705208660fe080429a2fc23a6c181 .rsrc 4096 0.405655\r\nPackers/Compilers/Cryptors\r\nMicrosoft Visual C++ v6.0\r\nRelationships\r\naab2868a6e... Connected_To 112.217.108.138\r\nDescription\r\nThe sample performs dynamic dynamic link library (DLL) importing and application programming interface (API) lookups\r\nusing LoadLibrary and GetProcAddress on obfuscated strings in an attempt to hide it’s usage of network functions. The\r\nsample obfuscates strings used for API lookups using a custom XOR algorithm. A Python3 script to decrypt the obfuscated\r\nstrings is given below.\r\n--Begin Python3 script--\r\n# key = 69 A7 DD 86 0A 67 78 77 A6 78 9A DA 78 68 A7 78\r\ndef decode_string(enc, key):\r\n   dec = b''\r\n   for i in range(len(enc)):\r\n       # rotate key:\r\n       # [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,a,b,c,d,e,f] -\u003e [x,0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,a,b,c,d,e]\r\n       # where x=(key[0]^key[2])^(key[6]\u0026key[f])\r\n       for j in range(15, 0, -1):\r\n           key[j] = key[j-1]\r\n       key[0] = (key[0] ^ key[2]) ^ (key[6] + key[15])\r\n       dec += bytes([enc[i] ^ key[15]])    \r\n   return dec\r\n--End Python3 script--\r\nThe sample obfuscates its callback descriptors (IP address and ports) using a different custom XOR algorithm. A Python3\r\nscript to decrypt the obfuscated data is given below.\r\n--Begin Python3 script--\r\n# key = 5E 85 41 FD 0C 37 57 71 D5 51 5D E3 B5 55 62 20\r\n#     C1 30 96 D3 77 4C 23 13 84 8B 63 5C 48 32 2C 5B\r\n#     94 8F 3A 26 79 E2 6B 94 45 D1 6F 51 24 8F 86 72\r\n#     C8 D3 8D C1 C0 D3 88 56 84 B3 91 E2 B2 24 64 24\r\ndef decode_callback_descriptors(enc, key):\r\n   dec = b''\r\n   for i in range(len(enc)):\r\n       dec += bytes([enc[i] ^ key[(i + 0x1378 + len(enc)) % 0x40] ^ 0x59])\r\n   return dec\r\n--End Python3 script--\r\nThe sample utilizes a “FakeTLS” scheme in an attempt to obfuscate its network communications. It picks a random Uniform\r\nResource Locator (URL) from a list (Figure 1) to use in the TLS certificate. The sample and the command and control (C2)\r\nexternally appear to perform a standard TLS authentication, however, most of the fields used are filled with random data\r\nfrom rand().\r\n--Begin C2--\r\n112.217.108.138:443\r\nhttps://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/analysis-reports/ar20-133c\r\nPage 3 of 5\n\n--End C2--\r\nOnce the FakeTLS handshake is complete, all further packets use a FakeTLS header, followed by RC4 encrypted data.\r\n--Begin packet structure--\r\n17 03 01 \u003c2 Byte data length\u003e \u003cRC4 encrypted data\u003e\r\nRC4 Key: 79 E1 0A 5D 87 7D 9F F7 5D 12 2E 11 65 AC E3 25\r\n--End packet structure--\r\nThe sample then waits for commands from the C2.\r\nScreenshots\r\nFigure 1 - List of certificate URLs used in the TLS certificate.\r\nFigure 2 - The implant contains the commands displayed in the table.\r\n112.217.108.138\r\nTags\r\ncommand-and-control\r\nRelationships\r\n112.217.108.138 Connected_From aab2868a6ebc6bdee5bd12104191db9fc1950b30bcf96eab99801624651e77b6\r\nDescription\r\nThe malware attempts to connect to the IP address.\r\nRelationship Summary\r\naab2868a6e... Connected_To 112.217.108.138\r\n112.217.108.138 Connected_From aab2868a6ebc6bdee5bd12104191db9fc1950b30bcf96eab99801624651e77b6\r\nMitigation\r\nThe following Snort rule can be used to detect the FakeTLS RC4 encrypted command packets:\r\n//Detects the FakeTLS RC4 encrypted command packets\r\n// that use no arguments (i.e. nextlen = 0)\r\nalert tcp any any -\u003e any any (msg:\"Malware Detected\"; pcre:\" /\\x17\\x03\\x01\\x00\\x08.\\x20\\x59\\x2c/\"; rev:1; sid:99999999;)\r\nRecommendations\r\nCISA recommends that users and administrators consider using the following best practices to strengthen the security\r\nposture of their organization's systems. Any configuration changes should be reviewed by system owners and administrators\r\nprior to implementation to avoid unwanted impacts.\r\nMaintain up-to-date antivirus signatures and engines.\r\nKeep operating system patches up-to-date.\r\nDisable File and Printer sharing services. If these services are required, use strong passwords or Active Directory\r\nauthentication.\r\nRestrict users' ability (permissions) to install and run unwanted software applications. Do not add users to the local\r\nadministrators group unless required.\r\nEnforce a strong password policy and implement regular password changes.\r\nExercise caution when opening e-mail attachments even if the attachment is expected and the sender appears to be\r\nknown.\r\nEnable a personal firewall on agency workstations, configured to deny unsolicited connection requests.\r\nDisable unnecessary services on agency workstations and servers.\r\nScan for and remove suspicious e-mail attachments; ensure the scanned attachment is its \"true file type\" (i.e., the\r\nextension matches the file header).\r\nMonitor users' web browsing habits; restrict access to sites with unfavorable content.\r\nhttps://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/analysis-reports/ar20-133c\r\nPage 4 of 5\n\nExercise caution when using removable media (e.g., USB thumb drives, external drives, CDs, etc.).\r\nScan all software downloaded from the Internet prior to executing.\r\nMaintain situational awareness of the latest threats and implement appropriate Access Control Lists (ACLs).\r\nAdditional information on malware incident prevention and handling can be found in National Institute of Standards and\r\nTechnology (NIST) Special Publication 800-83, \"Guide to Malware Incident Prevention \u0026 Handling for Desktops and\r\nLaptops\".\r\nContact Information\r\nDocument FAQ\r\nWhat is a MIFR? A Malware Initial Findings Report (MIFR) is intended to provide organizations with malware analysis in\r\na timely manner. In most instances this report will provide initial indicators for computer and network defense. To request\r\nadditional analysis, please contact CISA and provide information regarding the level of desired analysis.\r\nWhat is a MAR? A Malware Analysis Report (MAR) is intended to provide organizations with more detailed malware\r\nanalysis acquired via manual reverse engineering. To request additional analysis, please contact CISA and provide\r\ninformation regarding the level of desired analysis.\r\nCan I edit this document? This document is not to be edited in any way by recipients. All comments or questions related to\r\nthis document should be directed to the CISA at 1-844-Say-CISA or contact@mail.cisa.dhs.gov .\r\nCan I submit malware to CISA? Malware samples can be submitted via three methods:\r\nWeb: https://malware.us-cert.gov\r\nE-Mail: submit@malware.us-cert.gov\r\nFTP: ftp.malware.us-cert.gov (anonymous)\r\nCISA encourages you to report any suspicious activity, including cybersecurity incidents, possible malicious code, software\r\nvulnerabilities, and phishing-related scams. Reporting forms can be found on CISA's homepage at www.us-cert.gov.\r\nSource: https://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/analysis-reports/ar20-133c\r\nhttps://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/analysis-reports/ar20-133c\r\nPage 5 of 5",
	"extraction_quality": 1,
	"language": "EN",
	"sources": [
		"ETDA",
		"Malpedia"
	],
	"references": [
		"https://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/analysis-reports/ar20-133c"
	],
	"report_names": [
		"ar20-133c"
	],
	"threat_actors": [
		{
			"id": "34eea331-d052-4096-ae03-a22f1d090bd4",
			"created_at": "2025-08-07T02:03:25.073494Z",
			"updated_at": "2026-04-10T02:00:03.709243Z",
			"deleted_at": null,
			"main_name": "NICKEL ACADEMY",
			"aliases": [
				"ATK3 ",
				"Black Artemis ",
				"COVELLITE ",
				"CTG-2460 ",
				"Citrine Sleet ",
				"Diamond Sleet ",
				"Guardians of Peace",
				"HIDDEN COBRA ",
				"High Anonymous",
				"Labyrinth Chollima ",
				"Lazarus Group ",
				"NNPT Group",
				"New Romanic Cyber Army Team",
				"Temp.Hermit ",
				"UNC577 ",
				"Who Am I?",
				"Whois Team",
				"ZINC "
			],
			"source_name": "Secureworks:NICKEL ACADEMY",
			"tools": [
				"Destover",
				"KorHigh",
				"Volgmer"
			],
			"source_id": "Secureworks",
			"reports": null
		},
		{
			"id": "732597b1-40a8-474c-88cc-eb8a421c29f1",
			"created_at": "2025-08-07T02:03:25.087732Z",
			"updated_at": "2026-04-10T02:00:03.776007Z",
			"deleted_at": null,
			"main_name": "NICKEL GLADSTONE",
			"aliases": [
				"APT38 ",
				"ATK 117 ",
				"Alluring Pisces ",
				"Black Alicanto ",
				"Bluenoroff ",
				"CTG-6459 ",
				"Citrine Sleet ",
				"HIDDEN COBRA ",
				"Lazarus Group",
				"Sapphire Sleet ",
				"Selective Pisces ",
				"Stardust Chollima ",
				"T-APT-15 ",
				"TA444 ",
				"TAG-71 "
			],
			"source_name": "Secureworks:NICKEL GLADSTONE",
			"tools": [
				"AlphaNC",
				"Bankshot",
				"CCGC_Proxy",
				"Ratankba",
				"RustBucket",
				"SUGARLOADER",
				"SwiftLoader",
				"Wcry"
			],
			"source_id": "Secureworks",
			"reports": null
		},
		{
			"id": "a2b92056-9378-4749-926b-7e10c4500dac",
			"created_at": "2023-01-06T13:46:38.430595Z",
			"updated_at": "2026-04-10T02:00:02.971571Z",
			"deleted_at": null,
			"main_name": "Lazarus Group",
			"aliases": [
				"Operation DarkSeoul",
				"Bureau 121",
				"Group 77",
				"APT38",
				"NICKEL GLADSTONE",
				"G0082",
				"COPERNICIUM",
				"Moonstone Sleet",
				"Operation GhostSecret",
				"APT 38",
				"Appleworm",
				"Unit 121",
				"ATK3",
				"G0032",
				"ATK117",
				"NewRomanic Cyber Army Team",
				"Nickel Academy",
				"Sapphire Sleet",
				"Lazarus group",
				"Hastati Group",
				"Subgroup: Bluenoroff",
				"Operation Troy",
				"Black Artemis",
				"Dark Seoul",
				"Andariel",
				"Labyrinth Chollima",
				"Operation AppleJeus",
				"COVELLITE",
				"Citrine Sleet",
				"DEV-0139",
				"DEV-1222",
				"Hidden Cobra",
				"Bluenoroff",
				"Stardust Chollima",
				"Whois Hacking Team",
				"Diamond Sleet",
				"TA404",
				"BeagleBoyz",
				"APT-C-26"
			],
			"source_name": "MISPGALAXY:Lazarus Group",
			"tools": [],
			"source_id": "MISPGALAXY",
			"reports": null
		},
		{
			"id": "32a223a8-3c79-4146-87c5-8557d38662ae",
			"created_at": "2022-10-25T15:50:23.703698Z",
			"updated_at": "2026-04-10T02:00:05.261989Z",
			"deleted_at": null,
			"main_name": "Lazarus Group",
			"aliases": [
				"Lazarus Group",
				"Labyrinth Chollima",
				"HIDDEN COBRA",
				"Guardians of Peace",
				"NICKEL ACADEMY",
				"Diamond Sleet"
			],
			"source_name": "MITRE:Lazarus Group",
			"tools": [
				"RawDisk",
				"Proxysvc",
				"BADCALL",
				"FALLCHILL",
				"WannaCry",
				"MagicRAT",
				"HOPLIGHT",
				"TYPEFRAME",
				"Dtrack",
				"HotCroissant",
				"HARDRAIN",
				"Dacls",
				"KEYMARBLE",
				"TAINTEDSCRIBE",
				"AuditCred",
				"netsh",
				"ECCENTRICBANDWAGON",
				"AppleJeus",
				"BLINDINGCAN",
				"ThreatNeedle",
				"Volgmer",
				"Cryptoistic",
				"RATANKBA",
				"Bankshot"
			],
			"source_id": "MITRE",
			"reports": null
		},
		{
			"id": "f32df445-9fb4-4234-99e0-3561f6498e4e",
			"created_at": "2022-10-25T16:07:23.756373Z",
			"updated_at": "2026-04-10T02:00:04.739611Z",
			"deleted_at": null,
			"main_name": "Lazarus Group",
			"aliases": [
				"APT-C-26",
				"ATK 3",
				"Appleworm",
				"Citrine Sleet",
				"DEV-0139",
				"Diamond Sleet",
				"G0032",
				"Gleaming Pisces",
				"Gods Apostles",
				"Gods Disciples",
				"Group 77",
				"Guardians of Peace",
				"Hastati Group",
				"Hidden Cobra",
				"ITG03",
				"Jade Sleet",
				"Labyrinth Chollima",
				"Lazarus Group",
				"NewRomanic Cyber Army Team",
				"Operation 99",
				"Operation AppleJeus",
				"Operation AppleJeus sequel",
				"Operation Blockbuster: Breach of Sony Pictures Entertainment",
				"Operation CryptoCore",
				"Operation Dream Job",
				"Operation Dream Magic",
				"Operation Flame",
				"Operation GhostSecret",
				"Operation In(ter)caption",
				"Operation LolZarus",
				"Operation Marstech Mayhem",
				"Operation No Pineapple!",
				"Operation North Star",
				"Operation Phantom Circuit",
				"Operation Sharpshooter",
				"Operation SyncHole",
				"Operation Ten Days of Rain / DarkSeoul",
				"Operation Troy",
				"SectorA01",
				"Slow Pisces",
				"TA404",
				"TraderTraitor",
				"UNC2970",
				"UNC4034",
				"UNC4736",
				"UNC4899",
				"UNC577",
				"Whois Hacking Team"
			],
			"source_name": "ETDA:Lazarus Group",
			"tools": [
				"3CX Backdoor",
				"3Rat Client",
				"3proxy",
				"AIRDRY",
				"ARTFULPIE",
				"ATMDtrack",
				"AlphaNC",
				"Alreay",
				"Andaratm",
				"AngryRebel",
				"AppleJeus",
				"Aryan",
				"AuditCred",
				"BADCALL",
				"BISTROMATH",
				"BLINDINGCAN",
				"BTC Changer",
				"BUFFETLINE",
				"BanSwift",
				"Bankshot",
				"Bitrep",
				"Bitsran",
				"BlindToad",
				"Bookcode",
				"BootWreck",
				"BottomLoader",
				"Brambul",
				"BravoNC",
				"Breut",
				"COLDCAT",
				"COPPERHEDGE",
				"CROWDEDFLOUNDER",
				"Castov",
				"CheeseTray",
				"CleanToad",
				"ClientTraficForwarder",
				"CollectionRAT",
				"Concealment Troy",
				"Contopee",
				"CookieTime",
				"Cyruslish",
				"DAVESHELL",
				"DBLL Dropper",
				"DLRAT",
				"DRATzarus",
				"DRATzarus RAT",
				"Dacls",
				"Dacls RAT",
				"DarkComet",
				"DarkKomet",
				"DeltaCharlie",
				"DeltaNC",
				"Dembr",
				"Destover",
				"DoublePulsar",
				"Dozer",
				"Dtrack",
				"Duuzer",
				"DyePack",
				"ECCENTRICBANDWAGON",
				"ELECTRICFISH",
				"Escad",
				"EternalBlue",
				"FALLCHILL",
				"FYNLOS",
				"FallChill RAT",
				"Farfli",
				"Fimlis",
				"FoggyBrass",
				"FudModule",
				"Fynloski",
				"Gh0st RAT",
				"Ghost RAT",
				"Gopuram",
				"HARDRAIN",
				"HIDDEN COBRA RAT/Worm",
				"HLOADER",
				"HOOKSHOT",
				"HOPLIGHT",
				"HOTCROISSANT",
				"HOTWAX",
				"HTTP Troy",
				"Hawup",
				"Hawup RAT",
				"Hermes",
				"HotCroissant",
				"HotelAlfa",
				"Hotwax",
				"HtDnDownLoader",
				"Http Dr0pper",
				"ICONICSTEALER",
				"Joanap",
				"Jokra",
				"KANDYKORN",
				"KEYMARBLE",
				"Kaos",
				"KillDisk",
				"KillMBR",
				"Koredos",
				"Krademok",
				"LIGHTSHIFT",
				"LIGHTSHOW",
				"LOLBAS",
				"LOLBins",
				"Lazarus",
				"LightlessCan",
				"Living off the Land",
				"MATA",
				"MBRkiller",
				"MagicRAT",
				"Manuscrypt",
				"Mimail",
				"Mimikatz",
				"Moudour",
				"Mydoom",
				"Mydoor",
				"Mytob",
				"NACHOCHEESE",
				"NachoCheese",
				"NestEgg",
				"NickelLoader",
				"NineRAT",
				"Novarg",
				"NukeSped",
				"OpBlockBuster",
				"PCRat",
				"PEBBLEDASH",
				"PLANKWALK",
				"POOLRAT",
				"PSLogger",
				"PhanDoor",
				"Plink",
				"PondRAT",
				"PowerBrace",
				"PowerRatankba",
				"PowerShell RAT",
				"PowerSpritz",
				"PowerTask",
				"Preft",
				"ProcDump",
				"Proxysvc",
				"PuTTY Link",
				"QUICKRIDE",
				"QUICKRIDE.POWER",
				"Quickcafe",
				"QuiteRAT",
				"R-C1",
				"ROptimizer",
				"Ratabanka",
				"RatabankaPOS",
				"Ratankba",
				"RatankbaPOS",
				"RawDisk",
				"RedShawl",
				"Rifdoor",
				"Rising Sun",
				"Romeo-CoreOne",
				"RomeoAlfa",
				"RomeoBravo",
				"RomeoCharlie",
				"RomeoCore",
				"RomeoDelta",
				"RomeoEcho",
				"RomeoFoxtrot",
				"RomeoGolf",
				"RomeoHotel",
				"RomeoMike",
				"RomeoNovember",
				"RomeoWhiskey",
				"Romeos",
				"RustBucket",
				"SHADYCAT",
				"SHARPKNOT",
				"SIGFLIP",
				"SIMPLESEA",
				"SLICKSHOES",
				"SORRYBRUTE",
				"SUDDENICON",
				"SUGARLOADER",
				"SheepRAT",
				"SierraAlfa",
				"SierraBravo",
				"SierraCharlie",
				"SierraJuliett-MikeOne",
				"SierraJuliett-MikeTwo",
				"SimpleTea",
				"SimplexTea",
				"SmallTiger",
				"Stunnel",
				"TAINTEDSCRIBE",
				"TAXHAUL",
				"TFlower",
				"TOUCHKEY",
				"TOUCHMOVE",
				"TOUCHSHIFT",
				"TOUCHSHOT",
				"TWOPENCE",
				"TYPEFRAME",
				"Tdrop",
				"Tdrop2",
				"ThreatNeedle",
				"Tiger RAT",
				"TigerRAT",
				"Trojan Manuscript",
				"Troy",
				"TroyRAT",
				"VEILEDSIGNAL",
				"VHD",
				"VHD Ransomware",
				"VIVACIOUSGIFT",
				"VSingle",
				"ValeforBeta",
				"Volgmer",
				"Vyveva",
				"W1_RAT",
				"Wana Decrypt0r",
				"WanaCry",
				"WanaCrypt",
				"WanaCrypt0r",
				"WannaCry",
				"WannaCrypt",
				"WannaCryptor",
				"WbBot",
				"Wcry",
				"Win32/KillDisk.NBB",
				"Win32/KillDisk.NBC",
				"Win32/KillDisk.NBD",
				"Win32/KillDisk.NBH",
				"Win32/KillDisk.NBI",
				"WinorDLL64",
				"Winsec",
				"WolfRAT",
				"Wormhole",
				"YamaBot",
				"Yort",
				"ZetaNile",
				"concealment_troy",
				"http_troy",
				"httpdr0pper",
				"httpdropper",
				"klovbot",
				"sRDI"
			],
			"source_id": "ETDA",
			"reports": null
		}
	],
	"ts_created_at": 1775434907,
	"ts_updated_at": 1775792299,
	"ts_creation_date": 0,
	"ts_modification_date": 0,
	"files": {
		"pdf": "https://archive.orkl.eu/1f9f95c1c2b97238c2abb20aa29949f874df15b6.pdf",
		"text": "https://archive.orkl.eu/1f9f95c1c2b97238c2abb20aa29949f874df15b6.txt",
		"img": "https://archive.orkl.eu/1f9f95c1c2b97238c2abb20aa29949f874df15b6.jpg"
	}
}