Trojan.Injector

Seeing the Trojan.Injector detection usually means that your computer is in big danger. This computer virus can correctly be named as ransomware – virus which encrypts your files and asks you to pay for their decryption. Deleteing it requires some peculiar steps that must be taken as soon as possible.

Trojan.Injector detection is a virus detection you can spectate in your computer. It often shows up after the provoking actions on your computer – opening the untrustworthy email, clicking the banner in the Internet or setting up the program from unreliable resources. From the moment it appears, you have a short time to act until it starts its malicious activity. And be sure – it is far better not to wait for these destructive actions.

What is Trojan.Injector virus?

Trojan.Injector is ransomware-type malware. It searches for the files on your disks, ciphers it, and after that asks you to pay the ransom for getting the decryption key. Besides making your documents locked, this virus also does a ton of damage to your system. It alters the networking setups in order to avoid you from looking for the elimination guides or downloading the antivirus. Sometimes, Trojan.Injector can also prevent the setup of anti-malware programs.

Trojan.Injector Summary

In total, Trojan.Injector malware actions in the infected computer are next:

  • Behavioural detection: Executable code extraction – unpacking;
  • Yara rule detections observed from a process memory dump/dropped files/CAPE;
  • Creates RWX memory;
  • Dynamic (imported) function loading detected;
  • Reads data out of its own binary image;
  • CAPE extracted potentially suspicious content;
  • The binary likely contains encrypted or compressed data.;
  • Authenticode signature is invalid;
  • Behavioural detection: Injection (inter-process);
  • Behavioural detection: Injection with CreateRemoteThread in a remote process;
  • Ciphering the files located on the target’s drives — so the victim cannot use these documents;
  • Blocking the launching of .exe files of anti-malware programs
  • Blocking the launching of installation files of anti-virus programs

Ransomware has been a nightmare for the last 4 years. It is challenging to imagine a more harmful virus for both individuals and companies. The algorithms utilized in Trojan.Injector (generally, RHA-1028 or AES-256) are not hackable – with minor exclusions. To hack it with a brute force, you need more time than our galaxy actually exists, and possibly will exist. But that malware does not do all these horrible things instantly – it may require up to several hours to cipher all of your files. Thus, seeing the Trojan.Injector detection is a clear signal that you should begin the removal procedure.

Where did I get the Trojan.Injector?

General tactics of Trojan.Injector injection are common for all other ransomware examples. Those are one-day landing websites where victims are offered to download the free software, so-called bait e-mails and hacktools. Bait e-mails are a pretty modern tactic in malware distribution – you receive the email that imitates some standard notifications about shipments or bank service conditions changes. Within the email, there is an infected MS Office file, or a link which leads to the exploit landing page.

Malicious email spam

Malicious email message. This one tricks you to open the phishing website.

Preventing it looks quite simple, however, still needs tons of attention. Malware can hide in various spots, and it is better to stop it even before it goes into your PC than to rely upon an anti-malware program. Basic cybersecurity knowledge is just an essential thing in the modern world, even if your interaction with a PC remains on YouTube videos. That may keep you a lot of time and money which you would spend while looking for a fixing guide.

Trojan.Injector malware technical details

File Info:

name: E39EF59F859C3B7C7922.mlwpath: /opt/CAPEv2/storage/binaries/c6e7591be258d24ef78c0db28d85c60dc56af0cc4c5d87bfaf39a5f2900022cecrc32: 90AB12A9md5: e39ef59f859c3b7c7922693baeba5b88sha1: 886e8ca826b065d2cda7c6d5b75bb1a84f355f7esha256: c6e7591be258d24ef78c0db28d85c60dc56af0cc4c5d87bfaf39a5f2900022cesha512: 59fb2bed919b24941c99c0b2788361143721c686aff37e314be4dc679bedae452cbaf30991c290e80847a4345564db36e0293caba3b5c3ec859ea0d6c39a38b5ssdeep: 1536:S+BGp2aE8DfW/p+ZOJHMPzdSto8tG5TP0h:S+BGp1Xq/p+ZOZMcm48type: PE32 executable (GUI) Intel 80386, for MS Windowstlsh: T1E143E1FDDEC10A36E87A26327569892FC814A798431926DF1F4C0A1D1E337F89BBC159sha3_384: 31fd01ba4b43644e28a25635e2d1fb5c33fb619aeee585456bdd2d866de7d7ed746f0ce0c7e663d6f07c1b06a5f414f4ep_bytes: 558bec6aff680025400064a100000000timestamp: 2019-02-09 04:20:01

Version Info:

0: [No Data]

Trojan.Injector also known as:

Bkav W32.AIDetect.malware1
Cynet Malicious (score: 100)
CAT-QuickHeal Trojan.GenericRI.S26969887
McAfee Generic Obfuscated.a
Malwarebytes Trojan.Injector
Sangfor Suspicious.Win32.Save.a
CrowdStrike win/malicious_confidence_90% (D)
Cyren W32/Kryptik.DSB.gen!Eldorado
Symantec ML.Attribute.HighConfidence
Elastic malicious (high confidence)
ESET-NOD32 a variant of Win32/Injector.EDHG
APEX Malicious
Kaspersky HEUR:Trojan.Win32.Generic
BitDefender Gen:Variant.Kazy.371530
MicroWorld-eScan Gen:Variant.Kazy.371530
Rising Trojan.Inject!8.103 (RDMK:cmRtazoFbguXhpno1nI)
Ad-Aware Gen:Variant.Kazy.371530
Emsisoft Gen:Variant.Kazy.371530 (B)
F-Secure Trojan.TR/Vundo.Gen
McAfee-GW-Edition BehavesLike.Win32.Emotet.qc
FireEye Generic.mg.e39ef59f859c3b7c
Sophos ML/PE-A
SentinelOne Static AI – Malicious PE
GData Gen:Variant.Kazy.371530
Avira TR/Vundo.Gen
Arcabit Trojan.Kazy.D5AB4A
ZoneAlarm HEUR:Trojan.Win32.Generic
Microsoft Trojan:Win32/Sabsik.FL.B!ml
AhnLab-V3 Malware/Win32.Generic.C3332149
Acronis suspicious
VBA32 BScope.Trojan.Fuerboos
ALYac Gen:Variant.Kazy.371530
MAX malware (ai score=82)
Cylance Unsafe
Yandex Trojan.GenAsa!mqjJXdGlicY
Ikarus Trojan.Win32.Injector
Fortinet W32/Generic.AP.2F34C4!tr
BitDefenderTheta AI:Packer.36064EE81F
AVG Win32:TrojanX-gen [Trj]
Cybereason malicious.f859c3
Avast Win32:TrojanX-gen [Trj]

How to remove Trojan.Injector?

About the author

Robert Bailey

Security engineer focused on malware behavior, removal workflows, and Windows hardening. Robert reviews threat articles for practical accuracy, checking detection names, symptoms, and cleanup steps before publication.

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