Living-off-the-land binaries, often referred to as LOLbins, are legitimate (
  
   Windows
  
  ) binaries used for malicious purposes. Their use has increased in malware campaigns in recent years and serves as a reminder that a defensive approach focused purely on detecting malicious binaries is outdated.
 
Thus rather than focus on the binaries itself, it is important to study the parent-child process that leads to a binary being executed to determine whether its use is likely malicious.
  This is the premise of
  
   a paper
  
  to be presented at VB2019 by
  
   Endgame
  
  researcher Bobby Filar, who will discuss Problem Child, a graph-based framework designed to address these issues. In his research he also used the framework against activities by two known APT actors: OceanLotus and APT3.
 
  With VB2019 just one month away, it is time to
  
   book your ticket
  
  for the most international threat intelligence event of the year!
 

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