INDICATOR-COMPROMISE -- Snort detected a system behavior that suggests the system has been affected by malware. That behavior is known as an Indicator of Compromise (IOC). The symptoms could be a wide range of behaviors, from a suspicious file name to an unusual use of a utility. Symptoms do not guarantee an infection; your network configuration may not be affected by malware, but showing indicators as a result of a normal function. In this case, attackers may be attempting to gain privileges and access other systems, spread influence, and make calls and commands with elevated access. The context of the traffic is important to determine intrusion; traffic from an administration utility performing commands on a user's computer is likely not a compromise, but a user laptop accessing a webserver may indicate intrusion.
INDICATOR-COMPROMISE Microsoft Windows ntds.dit file exfiltration attempt
This rule looks for strings known to be specific to ntds.dit files.
This rule fires when an ntds.dit file is detected being moved across a network.
No public information
No known false positives
Cisco Talos Intelligence Group
MITRE::ATT&CK Framework::Enterprise::Exfiltration::Exfiltration Over C2 Channel
MITRE::ATT&CK Framework::Enterprise::Reconnaissance::Gather Victim Host Information
MITRE::ATT&CK Framework::Enterprise::Command and Control::Application Layer Protocol
MITRE::ATT&CK Framework::Enterprise::Execution::User Execution::Malicious File
None
No information provided
None