|
| Name: | Ajan |
| Aliases: | Trojan.PSW.Ajan.11, |
| Ports: | 25 (port can not be changed) |
| Files: | Ajan11_turktroj.zip - 55,258 bytes Ajan11.zip - 55,394 bytes Ajanbind.exe - 40,960 bytes Ajanbase.exe - 40,960 bytes Ajanconf.exe - 16,384 bytes Ajanconf.exe - 16,384 bytes Ajanconf_eng.exe - 16,384 bytes Ajanserv.exe - 28,672 bytes Config.bat - 27 bytes |
| Created: | June 1999 |
| Requires: | N/A |
| Actions: | Steals passwords |
| Versions: | 1.0, 1.1, |
| Registers: | N/A |
| Notes: | Works on Windows 95, 98 and ME. |
| Country: | written in Turkey |
| Program: | N/A |
Using the Process Monitor from AATools, you will see whether any foreign
programs are running on your computer. If you find some unwanted program, you
can terminate it by clicking the 'Terminate Process' button on the Toolbar.
Using the AATools Network Monitor, you can see what ports are in use on
your local PC for connection with remote systems (LAN/Internet). On Windows
NT/2000/XP the Network Monitor will display you the services that are active on
the ports, and map the ports to their respective applications. If you register
port probes directed against ports that are normally not used, it is possible
that someone is trying to connect to a Trojan inside your network. Using the
Registry Cleaner (Startup section) from AATools, you will see
the list of programs that are registered under Run, RunOnce, RunOnceEx and
RunService registry keys. So you can find out what programs are started behind
your back. You should check these programs to see they are legitimate ones but
not Trojans programs.
0-C | D-H | I-N
| O-S | T-Z
If you have any questions or information about ports used by Trojans not
listed above, please contact us. |