IOA tags—Information about the results of file analysis using the Targeted Attack Analyzer technology: name of the TAA (IOA) rule that was used to create the alert.
Click the link to display information about the TAA (IOA) rule. If the rule was provided by Kaspersky experts, it contains information about the triggered MITRE technique as well as recommendations for reacting to the event.
The MITRE ATT&CK (Adversarial Tactics, Techniques & Common Knowledge) database contains descriptions of hacker behavior based on the analysis of real attacks. It is a structured list of known hacker techniques represented as a table.
The field is displayed if a TAA (IOA) rule was triggered when the event was created.
Detect—Name of the detected object.
Clicking the link with the object name opens a list in which you can select one of the following actions:
Find events.
View on Kaspersky Threats.
Copy value to clipboard.
Last action—Last action taken on the detected object.
Object name—Full name of the file in which the object was detected.
MD5—MD5 hash of the file in which the object was detected.
SHA256—SHA256 hash of the file in which the object was detected.
Object type—Type of object (for example, a file).
Detect mode—Scan mode in which the alert was generated.
Event time—Date and time of the event.
Record ID—ID of the record of the alert in the database.
Database version—Version of the database used to generate the alert.
Content—Contents of the script sent to be scanned.
You can download this data by clicking Save to file.
On the Details tab, in the Event initiator section:
File—Path to the parent process file.
Clicking the link with the file name or file path opens a list in which you can select one of the following actions: