Trojan.Agent.Gen.CUO
Threat Scorecard
EnigmaSoft Threat Scorecard
EnigmaSoft Threat Scorecards are assessment reports for different malware threats which have been collected and analyzed by our research team. EnigmaSoft Threat Scorecards evaluate and rank threats using several metrics including real-world and potential risk factors, trends, frequency, prevalence, and persistence. EnigmaSoft Threat Scorecards are updated regularly based on our research data and metrics and are useful for a wide range of computer users, from end users seeking solutions to remove malware from their systems to security experts analyzing threats.
EnigmaSoft Threat Scorecards display a variety of useful information, including:
Popularity Rank: The ranking of a particular threat in EnigmaSoft’s Threat Database.
Severity Level: The determined severity level of an object, represented numerically, based on our risk modeling process and research, as explained in our Threat Assessment Criteria.
Infected Computers: The number of confirmed and suspected cases of a particular threat detected on infected computers as reported by SpyHunter.
See also Threat Assessment Criteria.
| Popularity Rank: | 27,268 |
| Threat Level: | 80 % (High) |
| Infected Computers: | 1 |
| First Seen: | June 1, 2026 |
| Last Seen: | June 28, 2026 |
| OS(es) Affected: | Windows |
Trojan.Agent.Gen.CUO is a generic detection for a malicious Windows program that behaves like a trojan. The "Agent" and generic ("Gen") labels are applied to harmful files that match the general behavior of known trojans without belonging to one specific named family — a way for security tools to catch new and modified malware quickly.
SpyHunter actively detects files that match this signature. Files flagged under this detection are typically unsigned.
Table of Contents
What Is a Generic Trojan Detection?
Generic detections identify malware based on shared traits rather than an exact fingerprint. Files flagged as Trojan.Agent typically run hidden in the background, connect to remote servers, and may steal data, download further malware, or open the system to remote control. The label is broad by design, so the correct response is to treat the file as malicious and remove it.
How It Spreads
These trojans arrive through phishing emails, malicious links and downloads, cracked software, and bundling with other threats. Behavioral analysis of this sample shows system-call activity consistent with a program interacting with Windows internals to perform its actions.
What Trojan.Agent.Gen.CUO May Do
- Information theft: harvest files, credentials, or system details.
- Malware delivery: download and execute additional payloads.
- Remote control: potentially provide backdoor access to attackers.
Symptoms of Infection
- Unfamiliar background processes and network activity.
- Disabled or malfunctioning security software.
- Slowdowns, crashes, or unexpected system changes.
Why It Is Dangerous
Because a generic trojan's exact capabilities are unknown, it should be assumed capable of serious harm — from data theft to full remote access. The Threat Scorecard on this page reflects how SpyHunter's systems rank this threat.
How to Remove Trojan.Agent.Gen.CUO
Because this threat runs as a file-based Windows infection, removal has two goals: stop the malicious process and delete every component it dropped, then confirm nothing was left behind to reinstall it.
Manual Steps
- Disconnect the computer from the internet to cut the malware off from its command-and-control server.
- Restart Windows in Safe Mode with Networking so the threat is not loaded at startup.
- Open Task Manager and end any unfamiliar or suspicious background processes.
- Check Settings → Apps and uninstall any program you do not recognize or did not intentionally install.
- Review startup entries (Task Manager → Startup) and the
Runregistry keys for entries that point to random file names in temporary folders. - Clear temporary files to remove staging copies of the payload.
Recommended: Run a Full Malware Scan
Manual removal is difficult because modern threats hide components and can restore themselves. The most reliable way to fully remove Trojan.Agent.Gen.CUO and any additional malware it may have downloaded is to scan the system with a professional, up-to-date anti-malware tool such as SpyHunter. A complete scan will detect and remove the threat's files, registry entries, and related infections, helping restore the device to a clean, secure state.
Conclusion
Trojan.Agent.Gen.CUO is a generic yet real trojan detection that warrants prompt action. Remove it with a trusted security tool and scan the system fully to clear the threat and any secondary infections.
Analysis Report
General information
| Family Name: | Trojan.Agent.Gen.CUO |
|---|---|
| Signature status: | No Signature |
Known Samples
Known Samples
This section lists other file samples believed to be associated with this family.|
MD5:
90e545a83191a9298adf604ea8019ec9
SHA1:
b1ebbdf7b53ba5ffa9f3efea2f61b2d7f6840f05
SHA256:
3EEB4BE7F495D168FFE37D027F6D2A0A0EE6E1F78CEB35230CE2C7719F9CC7F2
File Size:
390.66 KB, 390656 bytes
|
Windows Portable Executable Attributes
- File doesn't have "Rich" header
- File doesn't have security information
- File has exports table
- File is 64-bit executable
- File is either console or GUI application
- File is GUI application (IMAGE_SUBSYSTEM_WINDOWS_GUI)
- File is Native application (NOT .NET application)
- File is not packed
- IMAGE_FILE_DLL is not set inside PE header (Executable)
- IMAGE_FILE_EXECUTABLE_IMAGE is set inside PE header (Executable Image)
Windows PE Version Information
Windows PE Version Information
This section displays values and attributes that have been set in the Windows file version information data structure for samples within this family. To mislead users, malware actors often add fake version information mimicking legitimate software.| Name | Value |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Game Dev Studio |
| File Description | Graphics Library |
| File Version | 1.0.0.988 |
| Internal Name | intel_physics.dll |
| Legal Copyright | Copyright (C) 2024 |
| Original Filename | intel_physics.dll |
File Traits
- dll
- x64
Block Information
Block Information
During analysis, EnigmaSoft breaks file samples into logical blocks for classification and comparison with other samples. Blocks can be used to generate malware detection rules and to group file samples into families based on shared source code, functionality and other distinguishing attributes and characteristics. This section lists a summary of this block data, as well as its classification by EnigmaSoft. A visual representation of the block data is also displayed, where available.| Total Blocks: | 1,307 |
|---|---|
| Potentially Malicious Blocks: | 152 |
| Whitelisted Blocks: | 1,097 |
| Unknown Blocks: | 58 |
Visual Map
? - Unknown Block
x - Potentially Malicious Block
Windows API Usage
Windows API Usage
This section lists Windows API calls that are used by the samples in this family. Windows API usage analysis is a valuable tool that can help identify malicious activity, such as keylogging, security privilege escalation, data encryption, data exfiltration, interference with antivirus software, and network request manipulation.| Category | API |
|---|---|
| Syscall Use |
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