{
	"id": "3309cded-c54b-489a-af85-690b4a53b613",
	"created_at": "2026-04-06T00:14:43.304661Z",
	"updated_at": "2026-04-10T13:12:05.136829Z",
	"deleted_at": null,
	"sha1_hash": "8a720314e6c3ec27f9b962121d6b82076c7429a5",
	"title": "Agent Tesla - Threat Group Cards: A Threat Actor Encyclopedia",
	"llm_title": "",
	"authors": "",
	"file_creation_date": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
	"file_modification_date": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
	"file_size": 30345,
	"plain_text": "Agent Tesla - Threat Group Cards: A Threat Actor Encyclopedia\r\nArchived: 2026-04-02 10:57:20 UTC\r\nDescription(Fortinet) FortiGuard Labs recently captured some malware which was developed using the Microsoft\r\n.Net framework. I analyzed one of them, it's a new variant from AgentTasla family. In this blog, I’m going to show\r\nyou how it is able to steal information from a victim’s machine.\r\nThe malware was spread via a Microsoft Word document that contained an auto-executable malicious VBA\r\nMacro.\r\nSource: https://apt.etda.or.th/cgi-bin/listgroups.cgi?u=fe58993d-9e29-4ff8-8bb1-b580762bbe7d\r\nhttps://apt.etda.or.th/cgi-bin/listgroups.cgi?u=fe58993d-9e29-4ff8-8bb1-b580762bbe7d\r\nPage 1 of 1",
	"extraction_quality": 1,
	"language": "EN",
	"sources": [
		"ETDA"
	],
	"origins": [
		"web"
	],
	"references": [
		"https://apt.etda.or.th/cgi-bin/listgroups.cgi?u=fe58993d-9e29-4ff8-8bb1-b580762bbe7d"
	],
	"report_names": [
		"listgroups.cgi?u=fe58993d-9e29-4ff8-8bb1-b580762bbe7d"
	],
	"threat_actors": [],
	"ts_created_at": 1775434483,
	"ts_updated_at": 1775826725,
	"ts_creation_date": 0,
	"ts_modification_date": 0,
	"files": {
		"pdf": "https://archive.orkl.eu/8a720314e6c3ec27f9b962121d6b82076c7429a5.pdf",
		"text": "https://archive.orkl.eu/8a720314e6c3ec27f9b962121d6b82076c7429a5.txt",
		"img": "https://archive.orkl.eu/8a720314e6c3ec27f9b962121d6b82076c7429a5.jpg"
	}
}