{
	"id": "0cc912cb-a873-490f-810b-4f3496b79711",
	"created_at": "2026-04-06T00:09:14.506932Z",
	"updated_at": "2026-04-10T13:13:09.351223Z",
	"deleted_at": null,
	"sha1_hash": "4a7faae2711662886d310c88e02f86d513683ca1",
	"title": "Kaspersky Threats — Nyxem",
	"llm_title": "",
	"authors": "",
	"file_creation_date": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
	"file_modification_date": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
	"file_size": 48309,
	"plain_text": "Kaspersky Threats — Nyxem\r\nArchived: 2026-04-05 12:49:09 UTC\r\nParent class: VirWare\r\nViruses and worms are malicious programs that self-replicate on computers or via computer networks without the\r\nuser being aware; each subsequent copy of such malicious programs is also able to self-replicate. Malicious\r\nprograms which spread via networks or infect remote machines when commanded to do so by the “owner” (e.g.\r\nBackdoors) or programs that create multiple copies that are unable to self-replicate are not part of the Viruses and\r\nWorms subclass. The main characteristic used to determine whether or not a program is classified as a separate\r\nbehaviour within the Viruses and Worms subclass is how the program propagates (i.e. how the malicious program\r\nspreads copies of itself via local or network resources.) Most known worms are spread as files sent as email\r\nattachments, via a link to a web or FTP resource, via a link sent in an ICQ or IRC message, via P2P file sharing\r\nnetworks etc. Some worms spread as network packets; these directly penetrate the computer memory, and the\r\nworm code is then activated. Worms use the following techniques to penetrate remote computers and launch\r\ncopies of themselves: social engineering (for example, an email message suggesting the user opens an attached\r\nfile), exploiting network configuration errors (such as copying to a fully accessible disk), and exploiting loopholes\r\nin operating system and application security. Viruses can be divided in accordance with the method used to infect\r\na computer:\r\nfile viruses\r\nboot sector viruses\r\nmacro viruses\r\nscript viruses\r\nAny program within this subclass can have additional Trojan functions. It should also be noted that many worms\r\nuse more than one method in order to spread copies via networks.\r\nClass: Email-Worm\r\nEmail-Worms spread via email. The worm sends a copy of itself as an attachment to an email message or a link to\r\nits file on a network resource (e.g. a URL to an infected file on a compromised website or a hacker-owned\r\nwebsite). In the first case, the worm code activates when the infected attachment is opened (launched). In the\r\nsecond case, the code is activated when the link to the infected file is opened. In both case, the result is the same:\r\nthe worm code is activated. Email-Worms use a range of methods to send infected emails. The most common are:\r\nusing a direct connection to a SMTP server using the email directory built into the worm’s code using MS Outlook\r\nservices using Windows MAPI functions. Email-Worms use a number of different sources to find email addresses\r\nto which infected emails will be sent: the address book in MS Outlook a WAB address database .txt files stored on\r\nthe hard drive: the worm can identify which strings in text files are email addresses emails in the inbox (some\r\nEmail-Worms even “reply” to emails found in the inbox) Many Email-Worms use more than one of the sources\r\nhttps://threats.kaspersky.com/en/threat/Email-Worm.Win32.Nyxem/\r\nPage 1 of 3\n\nlisted above. There are also other sources of email addresses, such as address books associated with web-based\r\nemail services.\r\nRead more\r\nPlatform: Win32\r\nWin32 is an API on Windows NT-based operating systems (Windows XP, Windows 7, etc.) that supports\r\nexecution of 32-bit applications. One of the most widespread programming platforms in the world.\r\nDescription\r\n1. Reboot your computer in Safe Mode - press and hold F8 while the machine is rebooting and choose Safe\r\nMode from the menu when it appears.\r\n2. In Task Manager, terminate any process with one of the following names:\r\nrundll16.exe\r\nscanregw.exe\r\nUpdate.exe\r\nWinzip.exe\r\nWINZIP_TMP.EXE\r\nNew WinZip File.exe\r\nWinZip Quick Pick.exe\r\n3. Manually delete the following files from the Windows root and system directories, and the system registry:\r\n%Windir%rundll16.exe\r\nhttps://threats.kaspersky.com/en/threat/Email-Worm.Win32.Nyxem/\r\nPage 2 of 3\n\n%System%scanregw.exe\r\n%System%Update.exe\r\n%System%Winzip.exe\r\n%System%WINZIP_TMP.EXE\r\n%System%New WinZip File.exe\r\n%User Profile%Start MenuProgramsStartupWinZip Quick Pick.exe\r\n4. Delete the following value from the system registry:\r\n[HKLMSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionRun]\r\n\"ScanRegistry\" = \"scanregw.exe /scan\"\r\n5. Reboot your computer and check you have deleted all infected messages from all mail folders.\r\n6. If any applications have been damanged (in most cases this will be antivirus solutions and firewall\r\nprograms) you will need to re-install them.\r\n7. Perform a full scan of your computer (download a trial version of Kaspersky Anti-Virus here\r\nRead more\r\nFind out the statistics of the vulnerabilities spreading in your region on statistics.securelist.com\r\nFound an inaccuracy in the description of this vulnerability? Let us know!\r\nSource: https://threats.kaspersky.com/en/threat/Email-Worm.Win32.Nyxem/\r\nhttps://threats.kaspersky.com/en/threat/Email-Worm.Win32.Nyxem/\r\nPage 3 of 3",
	"extraction_quality": 1,
	"language": "EN",
	"sources": [
		"Malpedia"
	],
	"origins": [
		"web"
	],
	"references": [
		"https://threats.kaspersky.com/en/threat/Email-Worm.Win32.Nyxem/"
	],
	"report_names": [
		"Email-Worm.Win32.Nyxem"
	],
	"threat_actors": [
		{
			"id": "aa73cd6a-868c-4ae4-a5b2-7cb2c5ad1e9d",
			"created_at": "2022-10-25T16:07:24.139848Z",
			"updated_at": "2026-04-10T02:00:04.878798Z",
			"deleted_at": null,
			"main_name": "Safe",
			"aliases": [],
			"source_name": "ETDA:Safe",
			"tools": [
				"DebugView",
				"LZ77",
				"OpenDoc",
				"SafeDisk",
				"TypeConfig",
				"UPXShell",
				"UsbDoc",
				"UsbExe"
			],
			"source_id": "ETDA",
			"reports": null
		}
	],
	"ts_created_at": 1775434154,
	"ts_updated_at": 1775826789,
	"ts_creation_date": 0,
	"ts_modification_date": 0,
	"files": {
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}