Port No | 11660 |
Service Name | MultiDropper-IM |
RFC Doc | 0 |
Protocol | TCP |
Description | This memory-resident Trojan drops several files into the infected system. These dropped files are detected by Trend Micro as malware.
This Trojan also modifies the registry so that its dropped malware files automatically execute when the system starts up. It runs on Windows 95, 98, ME, NT, 2000, and XP. |
Reference Link | MultiDropper-IM |
Attack | Solutions: This procedure terminates the running malware process. Open Windows Task Manager. » On Windows 95, 98, and ME, press CTRL+ALT+DELETE » On Windows NT, 2000, and XP, press CTRL+SHIFT+ESC, then click the Processes tab. In the list of running programs*, locate the process: MSREG.EXE SVCHOSTS.EXE SVCHOSTC.EXE WINPRO.EXE Select the malware process, then press either the End Task or the End Process button, depending on the version of Windows on your system. To check if the malware process has been terminated, close Task Manager, and then open it again. Close Task Manager. This procedure terminates the running malware process. Open Windows Task Manager. » On Windows 95, 98, and ME, press CTRL+ALT+DELETE » On Windows NT, 2000, and XP, press CTRL+SHIFT+ESC, then click the Processes tab. In the list of running programs*, locate the process: MSREG.EXE SVCHOSTS.EXE SVCHOSTC.EXE WINPRO.EXE Select the malware process, then press either the End Task or the End Process button, depending on the version of Windows on your system. To check if the malware process has been terminated, close Task Manager, and then open it again. Close Task Manager. *NOTE: On systems running Windows 95, 98, and ME, Windows Task Manager may not show certain processes. You can use a third party process viewer such as Process Explorer to terminate the malware process. Otherwise, continue with the next procedure, noting additional instructions. |
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