Malicious Office (OLE) / .DOC — malware analysis report

Static analysis result for SHA-256 6b09f75d31d53f36…

MALICIOUS

Office (OLE) / .DOC

218.0 KB Created: 2008-07-11 06:57:00 Authoring application: Microsoft Office Word
MD5: 5315f985d0eacebea15cef01a3c7cc3e SHA-1: 6372399e431ad823e38680ff180847d60f2e81d1 SHA-256: 6b09f75d31d53f36ce2da3783f01e353f423543c79ba7d75bb62581affdd242e
80 Risk Score

Malware Insights

MITRE ATT&CK
T1566.001 Spearphishing Attachment

The OLE document exhibits characteristics of a dropper, specifically a large slack region and appended executable payload bytes. This indicates the file is likely designed to deliver a secondary malicious payload. The presence of these indicators strongly suggests a malicious intent, likely delivered via spearphishing.

Heuristics 2

  • OLE document has large unaccounted-for region high OLE_SLACK_ANOMALY
    OLE file is 223,232 bytes but its declared streams total only 16,543 bytes — 206,689 bytes (93%) live in unallocated sector slack. This is the canonical hiding place for pre-macro-era Office exploit payloads (XOR-encoded shellcode reached via a parser pointer-corruption bug in the document structure).
  • OLE file has appended executable-looking payload bytes high OLE_APPENDED_PAYLOAD
    OLE compound file contains a large high-entropy region beyond the declared major streams and that region includes shellcode, PE, or loader API markers. This is a payload-carrier signal, not a specific CVE attribution by itself.