9ba15eaff3a48ac58aee577933f413ee7ad84b9c


Zero‑Dwell Threat Intelligence Report

A narrative, executive‑ready view into the malware’s behavior, exposure, and reliable defenses.
Generated: 2025-08-27 15:01:45 UTC

Executive Overview — What We’re Dealing With

This specimen has persisted long enough to matter. Human experts classified it as Malware, and the telemetry confirms a capable, evasive Trojan with real impact potential.

File
9ba15eaff3a48ac58aee577933f413ee7ad84b9c
Type
PE32 executable (GUI) Intel 80386 Mono/.Net assembly, for MS Windows
SHA‑1
9ba15eaff3a48ac58aee577933f413ee7ad84b9c
MD5
c1305d1c4cb4b97a800ed6d52ce71333
First Seen
2025-08-25 01:02:23 UTC
Last Analysis
2025-08-27 20:15:45 UTC
Dwell Time
2 days, 19 hours, 13 minutes

Extended Dwell Time Impact

For 2+ days, this malware remained undetected — an unusually long window that granted the adversary the ability to persist, recon, and potentially exfiltrate data with zero alerts.

Comparative Context

Industry studies report a median dwell time closer to 21–24 days. This case doubles that benchmark, highlighting a severe detection gap.

Timeline

Date Event Elapsed
2025-06-04 Compilation of binary
2025-08-25 First VirusTotal submission
2025-08-25 Latest analysis snapshot

Why It Matters

Every additional day of dwell time is not just an abstract number — it is attacker opportunity. Each day equates to more time for lateral movement, stealth persistence, and intelligence gathering.

Global Detection Posture — Who Caught It, Who Missed It

Detections tell a story. As of the latest snapshot, 55 vendors detect this threat while 16 vendors miss it entirely — that’s 22.54% of your potential defense surface blind to the sample.

Detected Vendors

  • Xcitium
  • +54 additional vendors (names not provided)

List includes Xcitium plus an additional 54 vendors per the provided summary.

Missed Vendors

  • Acronis
  • Antiy-AVL
  • CMC
  • ClamAV
  • Cynet
  • DrWeb
  • Microsoft
  • SUPERAntiSpyware
  • VBA32
  • ViRobot
  • VirIT
  • Webroot
  • ZoneAlarm
  • Zoner
  • google_safebrowsing
  • tehtris

Why it matters: if any endpoint relies solely on a missed engine, this malware can operate with zero alerts. Prevention‑first controls close that gap regardless of signature lag.

Behavioral Storyline — How the Malware Operates

This threat blends evasive checks with data collection and outbound communications. Behavior tags point to sandbox detection, prolonged sleeps, registry reconnaissance, and encrypted egress — a classic quiet‑then‑talk pattern.

Behavior Categories (weighted)

  • hooking: 0.03%
  • network: 0.64%
  • threading: 0.56%
  • windows: 0.44%
  • misc: 2.89%
  • system: 52.00%
  • crypto: 0.03%
  • process: 5.08%
  • synchronization: 0.42%
  • device: 1.06%
  • registry: 23.94%
  • file system: 12.81%
  • services: 0.11%

MITRE ATT&CK Mapping

  • T1027 – Obfuscated/Compressed Files & Information
  • T1497 – Virtualization/Sandbox Evasion
  • T1055 – Process Injection

Following the Trail — Network & DNS Activity

Outbound activity leans on reputable infrastructure (e.g., CDNs, cloud endpoints) to blend in. TLS sessions and HTTP calls show routine beaconing and IP‑lookup behavior that can masquerade as normal browsing.

Contacted Domains

Domain IP Country ASN

Observed IPs

IP Country ASN

DNS Queries

Hostname Type

Hunting tip: alert on unknown binaries initiating TLS to IP‑lookup services or unusual CDN endpoints — especially early in execution.

Persistence & Policy — Registry and Services

Registry and service telemetry points to policy awareness and environment reconnaissance rather than noisy persistence. Below is a compact view of the most relevant keys and handles; expand to see the full lists where available.

Registry Opened

0

Registry Set

7

Services Started

2

Services Opened

3

Registry Opened (Top 25)

Key

Registry Set (Top 21)

  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\EnableFileTracing
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\EnableConsoleTracing
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\FileTracingMask
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\ConsoleTracingMask
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\MaxFileSize
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\FileDirectory

Services Started (Top 15)

Service Display

Services Opened (Top 15)

Service Display

Registry Set

  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\EnableFileTracing
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\EnableConsoleTracing
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\FileTracingMask
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\ConsoleTracingMask
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\MaxFileSize
  • HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Tracing\b9f9754e4b63e3b33a4edf693cd86b71faf9b971_RASAPI32\FileDirectory

Transport & Telemetry — TLS, HTTP, IP, IDS

The sample leans on encrypted transport and benign‑looking hosts, but the patterns still betray it: JA3/JA4 hints, cert chains, and IDS metadata are enough to anchor hunting queries.

TLS Sessions

Subject CN Issuer CN Serial TLS SNI JA3 JA4

IP Traffic

IP Country ASN
8.8.4.4 United States Google LLC
8.8.8.8 United States Google LLC

IDS Alerts

Signature Severity Category Src IP Dst IP Src Port Dst Port

What To Do Now — Practical Defense Playbook

  • Contain unknowns: block first‑run binaries by default — signatures catch up, containment works now.
  • EDR controls: alert on keyboard hooks, screen capture APIs, VM/sandbox checks, and command‑shell launches.
  • Registry watch: flag queries/sets under policy paths (e.g., …\FipsAlgorithmPolicy\*).
  • Network rules: inspect outbound TLS to IP‑lookup services and unexpected CDN endpoints.
  • Hunt broadly: sweep endpoints for the indicators above and quarantine positives immediately.

Dwell time equals attacker opportunity. Reducing execution privileges and egress shrinks that window even when vendors disagree.

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