Safe
Zero engines detected this small, unsigned MP3 file submitted for the first time today.
b325a072b75c00e79a…41674d1891The reasoning behind this verdict
The MT AI Engine weighs every signal from this scan — antivirus detections, sandbox behaviour, code signing, prevalence and historical matches — to reach a single, evidence-based verdict.
The complete absence of malicious detections from 61 engines, including 17 tier-1 vendors, combined with no behavioral, network, or external intelligence signals, indicates the file is benign. Its small size and MP3 classification align with ordinary audio content. The rare_new prevalence simply reflects first-time submission rather than suspicious activity.
Each signal cites a concrete token from the evidence the arbiter saw — engine name, MITRE technique, signer string, or an exact count.
engines.malicious=0 and tier1Malicious=0 across 61 reporting engines
prevalence.classification=rare_new with firstSubmissionDate 2026-06-02
externalIntel.yaraify.ruleCount=0 and externalIntel.circl.hit=false
signing.signed=false but no malicious signals present
- Zero detections from tier-1 engines including Microsoft, Kaspersky, Avast, BitDefender
- No external intelligence matches
Treat as safe audio content; no further action required.
What to do now
This file looks safe based on everything we checked.
This file is safe to use.
Good habit: only download files from the official website or an app store.
Keep your antivirus and Windows updates switched on so you stay protected.
0 detections across 75 engines
How widely this file has been seen
Barely seen in the wild and first surfaced recently. This is the footprint of targeted malware the AV industry hasn't signatured yet — extra scrutiny is warranted.
Forensic fingerprint
- File name
- 20260602_181718.amr
- Size
- 28.0 KB
- MIME type
- application/octet-stream
- Detected type
- MP3
- SHA-256
- b325a072b75c00e79a6c8d1451d698f8415368021f7567c098cc6541674d1891
- MD5
- 7bb2d4336bbe6392c99f1f03de19b3a2
- SHA-1
- 4bde7dfeeae9214ebd933221f9f771504cafb9e5
- First seen (VT)
- 6/2/2026, 12:26:15 PM
- Last analysis (VT)
- 6/2/2026, 12:26:15 PM
- First scan (MalwareTips)
- 6/2/2026, 12:26:49 PM
- Last scan (MalwareTips)
- 6/2/2026, 12:26:49 PM
Safety FAQ
Common questions about 20260602_181718.amr, answered from the scan data above.
- 20260602_181718.amr appears safe. 75 of 75 antivirus engines report it clean. As a habit, only open files you downloaded from the official source, since attackers sometimes distribute trojanised copies of legitimate software under the same name.
- 20260602_181718.amr is a file (application/octet-stream), about 28 KB. Our analysis found no threat indicators for it. A file's name can be reused by different files, so we identify it by its cryptographic hash (below).
- None — all 75 antivirus engines we queried report 20260602_181718.amr as clean. That's reassuring, though brand-new malware can briefly evade detection before vendors add signatures, so we also weigh the file's behaviour and reputation.
- The SHA-256 hash of 20260602_181718.amr is b325a072b75c00e79a6c8d1451d698f8415368021f7567c098cc6541674d1891, and its MD5 is 7bb2d4336bbe6392c99f1f03de19b3a2. This hash is the file's unique fingerprint — two files with the same SHA-256 are identical. Use it to confirm you're looking at exactly this file (not just one with the same name) when comparing against antivirus databases or a download's published checksum.
- Based on this scan, yes — 20260602_181718.amr shows no threat indicators. The important caveat is source: make sure you downloaded it from the official website or a trusted store, because attackers sometimes distribute malware-laced copies under a legitimate file's name. If your own antivirus flags it while we report it clean, that is most often a false positive, but verify the source before overriding your antivirus.
- This report reflects the scan run on June 2, 2026. Because a file's hash never changes, the identity of 20260602_181718.amr is fixed — but antivirus coverage improves over time, so a file that looks clean today can pick up detections later (and vice-versa). If you need the latest picture, MalwareTips staff can re-run the analysis from scratch.
Reviews & malware reports(0)
Tell the community what you saw. Tag the sample — Trojan, Adware, False Positive — and share what the file did on your system. Your report helps confirm or dispute the AV verdict.