Trojan.Rokamal
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:
Ranking: 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.
Threat Level: | 100 % (High) |
Infected Computers: | 2 |
First Seen: | April 25, 2014 |
Last Seen: | July 1, 2019 |
OS(es) Affected: | Windows |
Trojan.Rokamal is a Trojan that steals sensitive details from the corrupted PC. Trojan.Rokamal also opens a back door and may use the targeted PC to mine cryptocurrency and initiate distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks. Upon execution, Trojan.Rokamal creates the potentially infected files. Trojan.Rokamal then creates the registry entries so that it can launch automatically whenever the computer users boots up Windows. Trojan.Rokamal also creates numerous other registry entries. Trojan.Rokamal may then fulfill the potentially harmful activities on the contaminated computer system such as steal email credentials from Microsoft Outlook, open a command shell, log keystrokes and turn the attacked computer system into a Web proxy. Trojan.Rokamal may also steal passwords from the Web browsers such as Internet Explorer, Opera, Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox.
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