The user receives an email with "Truffles.7z" attached. The email usually provides a simple password (e.g., "1234") to encourage the user to extract the contents [2, 4].
The extracted file often uses "process hollowing" to inject malicious code into legitimate system processes (like cvtres.exe or RegSvcs.exe ) to hide from task managers [5, 6]. Truffles.7z
Often creates entries in HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run to ensure it restarts with the system [5]. The user receives an email with "Truffles
Configure email security gateways to flag or quarantine password-protected .7z or .zip files from external sources [2, 4]. Truffles.7z