user@threatcheck.sh ~ threat-analysis
bash
$ analyze-threat Trojan:BAT/AsyncRAT.K!MTB
Trojan:BAT/AsyncRAT.K!MTB - Windows Defender threat signature analysis

Trojan:BAT/AsyncRAT.K!MTB - Windows Defender Threat Analysis

$ cat analysis.txt
=== THREAT ANALYSIS REPORT ===
Threat Name: Trojan:BAT/AsyncRAT.K!MTB
Classification:
Type:Trojan
Platform:BAT
Family:AsyncRAT
Detection Type:Concrete
Known malware family with identified signatures
Variant:K
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: Trojan - Appears legitimate but performs malicious actions for Batch Script platform, family AsyncRAT

VDM Static Detection:
Relevant strings associated with this threat:
 - CreateSubKey (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForMshta.A!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForHooking.C!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForHooking.D!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForHooking.L!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForHooking.O!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForRegsvr32.A!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForRundll32.A!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - rundll32 (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForBITSJobs.A!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForPowerShell.G!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - InvokeV (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForScheduledTask.A!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForDataEncoding.D!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForHooking.J!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - WH_KEYBOARD (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForHooking.K!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForRemoteFileCopy.B!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:ExecutionGuardrails (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForFileDeletion.A!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
 - !#HSTR:StringCodeForHooking.M!pli (PEHSTR_EXT)
Known malware which is associated with this threat:
Filename: IMG-2025010-WA001310.CMD
ad6417ba292c504cb7307ca0c520435739f87908f117cc2423cd4b7e81cc1ac8
18/11/2025
=== END REPORT ===
$ reanalyze-threat
This analysis was last updated on 17/11/2025. Do you want to analyze it again?
$ ls available-commands/
user@threatcheck.sh:~$