user@threatcheck.sh ~ threat-analysis
bash
$ analyze-threat Backdoor:Linux/Mirai.HL!MTB
Backdoor:Linux/Mirai.HL!MTB - Windows Defender threat signature analysis

Backdoor:Linux/Mirai.HL!MTB - Windows Defender Threat Analysis

$ cat analysis.txt
=== THREAT ANALYSIS REPORT ===
Threat Name: Backdoor:Linux/Mirai.HL!MTB
Classification:
Type:Backdoor
Platform:Linux
Family:Mirai
Detection Type:Concrete
Known malware family with identified signatures
Variant:HL
Specific signature variant within the malware family
Suffix:!MTB
Detected via machine learning and behavioral analysis
Detection Method:Behavioral
Confidence:Very High
False-Positive Risk:Low

Concrete signature match: Backdoor - Provides unauthorized remote access for Linux platform, family Mirai

Summary:

This threat is a backdoor belonging to the Mirai malware family, which targets Linux systems and IoT devices. It compromises the device, turning it into a bot that can be used for large-scale Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks.

Severity:
Medium
VDM Static Detection:
No detailed analysis available from definition files.
Known malware which is associated with this threat:
Filename: wewe4.johnsmith
d3dfc2211f11b694bb769f5e36fd42c9bf8ec3b5b9d3c049b65c4fadaef654da
18/11/2025
Filename: wewe5.johnsmith
670251565543d34305ec08e0a2199387b61a79ed28d159c570c6d2ab3bf0a6e7
18/11/2025
Filename: wewe5.johnsmith
14bb590ff06dffc7d96389b8bbfbfcf7c197584dd0d1d8b1fc13a1512c483c68
18/11/2025
Filename: wewe5.johnsmith
4deb6cc31464d5a0276e42b7963991d57c8a8b680264ac0f8e12cd1d13fa1924
16/11/2025
Filename: wewe5.johnsmith
8edafa6a81fbbcd630de7eef9bff4571920a8324cc86706819ef92caef02ba96
16/11/2025
Remediation Steps:
Isolate the compromised device from the network immediately to prevent further malicious activity. Re-image the system or perform a factory reset to ensure complete removal. Change all default credentials to strong, unique passwords and disable unnecessary services like Telnet to prevent reinfection.
=== END REPORT ===
$ reanalyze-threat
This analysis was last updated on 13/11/2025. Do you want to analyze it again?
$ ls available-commands/
user@threatcheck.sh:~$