File verdict·Decided by the MT AI Engine
Our call

Malicious

ZIP archive containing PE payload that performs process injection and direct-IP C2 with multiple tier-1 engine detections.

abmrisk
Trust score12Critical
minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip
464.6 KB
cf2fc425200ff662cb55c2514fe3
Antivirus engines
13 of 74 flagged
Code signing
Unsigned
Age
First seen 1mo ago
MT AI Engine · Verdict analysis

The 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.

78%Confidence
High
Reasoning

The file is a ZIP that extracts a PE performing reflective DLL injection via rundll32 on lua51.dll and spawns cmd.exe to run Application.cmd. Six tier-1 engines label variants of Agent-G or Malarchive while three low-trust engines add generic detections. Direct-IP C2 to 208.95.112.1 and 217.28.130.150 without domain resolution is a strong malware indicator. Although no dropped child is flagged malicious and external intel is silent, the combination of offensive MITRE techniques, tier-1 detections, and unsigned status supports a malicious verdict.

Key signals · 5

Each signal cites a concrete token from the evidence the arbiter saw — engine name, MITRE technique, signer string, or an exact count.

  1. engines.tier1Malicious=6 with detections from Avast, AVG, Avira, F-Secure, Ikarus, Kaspersky, Symantec

  2. behaviour.offensiveTechniques includes T1055, T1059.001, T1562.001 and triggeredHeuristics MalwareTips.Synth.ProcessInjection + MalwareTips.Synth.DirectIpC2

  3. signing.verified=false and signing.signerStats.found=false (unsigned)

  4. contactedIps=[208.95.112.1, 217.28.130.150] with zero domains and no maliciousHosts hits

  5. prevalence.classification=medium with 67 uniqueSources and 39-day age

Points in its favour
  • No malicious dropped children
  • No external-intel rule hits
  • Medium prevalence (67 submitters)
Points against
  • Unsigned binary inside archive
  • Process injection (T1055) observed
  • Direct-IP C2 without DNS
  • Security-tool evasion (T1562.001)
  • 6 tier-1 engine detections
Recommended action

Treat the archive as malicious; avoid execution and remove all extracted files immediately.

What this file does

What it attempted when executed in an isolated sandbox

  • High concern: Hides inside another running program to evade antivirus.

  • High concern: Talks to a remote server to take commands or send out your data.

  • High concern: Tries to disable or bypass your security software.

  • High concern: Hijacks how Windows loads programs so it runs automatically.

  • Moderate concern: Lists running programs — often to find security tools.

  • Moderate concern: Runs hidden system commands (script or shell).

  • Moderate concern: Unpacks hidden code only once it's running.

Translated from the file's technical behaviour during analysis. It never ran on your device.

Threat context

How trojans work

A trojan disguises itself as something useful or harmless to trick you into running it. Once open, it does its real job in the background — anything from stealing data to opening a back door or downloading more malware.

Bottom line:The disguise is the whole trick, so a trustworthy-looking name or icon means nothing.

What to do now

This file is dangerous. Treat it as harmful and remove it.

  1. Don't open or run this file. Delete it from your Downloads (or wherever you saved it), then empty the Recycle Bin.

  2. If you already opened it, disconnect from the internet and run a full scan with your antivirus — Windows Security, built into Windows, is sufficient.

  3. If you typed any passwords while it was open, change them from a device you trust.

  4. In future, only download software from the official website or an official app store.

Threat family attribution

abmrisk corroborated by 2 sources

  • VT (74 engines)
    abmrisk
  • MT AI Engine
    abmrisk
Runtime behaviour

What this file did when executed

This file was detonated in 1 sandbox and its runtime behaviour was observed.

MITRE ATT&CK
14

Adversary techniques mapped to the MITRE ATT&CK framework.

T1012T1033· Reads user infoT1055· Process injectionT1057· Lists programsT1059.001· Runs commandsT1071· Remote server (C2)T1082· System reconT1129· Loads modulesT1140· DeobfuscationT1202T1497· Sandbox evasionT1562.001· Disables securityT1573T1574· Execution hijack
Spawned processes
11
$(unnamed)
"C:\Windows\system32\cmd.exe" /c "cd ^"C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Local\Temp^" && start /wait ^"^" ^"C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Local\Temp\Application.cmd^"
$(unnamed)
C:\Windows\system32\cmd.exe /K "C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Local\Temp\Application.cmd
$(unnamed)
binl.exe util.txt
$(unnamed)
"C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Local\Temp\binl.exe"
$(unnamed)
"C:\Windows\system32\rundll32.exe" "C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Local\Temp\lua51.dll",#1
$(unnamed)
C:\Windows\system32\WerFault.exe -u -p 5552 -s 588
$(unnamed)
C:\Windows\SysWOW64\unarchiver.exe "C:\Windows\SysWow64\unarchiver.exe" "C:\Users\user\Desktop\minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip"
$(unnamed)
C:\Windows\SysWOW64\7za.exe "C:\Windows\System32\7za.exe" x -pinfected -y -o"C:\Users\user\AppData\Local\Temp\gc5k5ynu.jxu" "C:\Users\user\Desktop\minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip"
+3 more processes captured.
Network activity
4
IP addresses2
  • 208.95.112.1
  • 217.28.130.150
URLs2
  • http://ip-api.com/json/
  • http://217.28.130.150/api/NTE3YjdjNWU1NjYzNjU2YTA1N2Y=
Filesystem & mutexes
24
Files written15
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\Temp
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\Temp\bff61d06-a1a4-4857-9b53-1b234fd6d647
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\ReportQueue
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\Temp\abfea3f0-f983-4870-8596-11ecfe70f77e
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\ReportArchive
+10 more
Files deleted6
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\Temp\WERD977.tmp
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\Temp\WERDF26.tmp
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\Temp\WERE10B.tmp
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\Temp\WERD977.tmp.dmp
  • C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\WER\Temp\WERDF26.tmp.WERInternalMetadata.xml
+1 more
Mutexes created3
  • mndinwqzoi4uyn4znqew3s27d87a7m8lrpxmbkpdc73gdicycqfnx5ha2cdv7nn9y8kkhgab9b3zysc4ruc
  • Local\WERReportingForProcess5552
  • Global\7670789d-f5fc-4ded-bb29-34fdc63504fe
Dropped payload

Files this sample writes at runtime

This file drops 6 children at runtime. None are currently flagged malicious in our cache.

6 unseen
  • 7ad4b911d05a12f91ab2d018c9Never scanned
    never seen before
  • 832e02964a1b4b52035ca30952Never scanned
    never seen before
  • 04d3c82782927330d56842bc58Never scanned
    never seen before
  • 181c3abd484fd38de5475cf5aaNever scanned
    never seen before
  • 470bfde2fdb97d244b052c0358Never scanned
    never seen before
  • 5726eef0c3d027de617e2316fdNever scanned
    never seen before
No researcher-database hits
External threat-intel sources were not collected for this scan.
Signature matches

YARA & heuristic rule matches

A researcher-curated or high-severity heuristic rule matched this sample. These rules target specific malware families and are near-definitive.

2 synthesis
MITRE ATT&CK profile
Defense evasion× 1C2× 1
MalwareTips synthesis rules
Our own detection rules, applied to the scan data and sandbox behaviour
  • ProcessInjectionhigh

    MITRE T1055 (Process Injection) observed — CreateRemoteThread / APC / reflective-DLL injection. The payload is being smuggled into a legitimate process to bypass AV hooks.

    Evidence
    "C:\Windows\system32\rundll32.exe" "C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Local\Temp\lua51.dll",#1
  • DirectIpC2medium

    Sample contacted 2 external IP address(es) and zero domains. Benign software virtually always uses DNS; no-DNS direct-IP C2 is a strong malware indicator because it bypasses reputation systems and dodges domain-based blocklists.

    Evidence
    208.95.112.1 · 217.28.130.150
Antivirus engine breakdown

13 detections across 74 engines

13 malicious0 suspicious61 clean
Tier-117 engines
7flag
Top commercial AVs (low FP rate)
Tier-240 engines
3flag
Mainstream engines with mixed FP rates
Low-trust17 engines
3flag
Heuristic / generic-AI engines (high FP rate)
alibabacloud
malicious
Backdoor:Win/StealC.gyf
Avast
malicious
Win:Agent-G [Trj]
AVG
malicious
Win:Agent-G [Trj]
Avira
malicious
TR/WIN.Agent.G
Cynet
malicious
Malicious (score: 99)
F-Secure
malicious
Trojan.TR/WIN.Agent.G
Google
malicious
Detected
huorong
malicious
Trojan/LUA.Agent.i
Ikarus
malicious
Trojan.LUA.Agent
Kaspersky
malicious
HEUR:Trojan.Script.Agent.gen
Rising
malicious
Trojan.Obfus/LUA!1.13DF5 (CLASSIC)
Symantec
malicious
Scr.Malarchive!gen10
Varist
malicious
W64/ABmRisk.PNFS-1060
Hash cf2fc425200f… cross-referenced against 74 AV engines via our AV network.
Prevalence

How widely this file has been seen

Moderate prevalence — neither rare nor common. No strong prior applies.

Medium
Unique uploaders
67
Moderate upload volume.
Total submissions
73
Includes repeat uploads by the same source.
First seen
1mo ago
Jun 9, 2026
Prevalence quadrant
Rare · New
Targeted malware lives here
Common · New
Just-released software
Rare · Old
Niche or internal tooling
Common · Old
Trusted legitimate binaries
File identity

Forensic fingerprint

File biography
First seen (VT)
6/9/2026, 7:51:54 PM
First seen (MalwareBazaar)
Last analysis (VT)
7/9/2026, 7:26:32 AM
Scanned here
7/18/2026, 11:44:51 PM
File name
minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip
Size
464.6 KB
MIME type
(unknown)
Detected type
ZIP
SHA-256
cf2fc425200ff662cb43485a7fbb65d4b2964f507025ecdf646eb155c2514fe3
MD5
5ef8f48aee9270ee7ab42e6d25dfa4dd
SHA-1
83159fdaa3ba85ec0f2d55bcea749bb0c08e7ad8
First seen (VT)
6/9/2026, 7:51:54 PM
Last analysis (VT)
7/9/2026, 7:26:32 AM
First scan (MalwareTips)
7/18/2026, 11:44:51 PM
Last scan (MalwareTips)
7/18/2026, 11:44:51 PM
Behavior tags
contains-pezipdetect-debug-environmentlong-sleeps
Frequently asked

Safety FAQ

Common questions about minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip, answered from the scan data above.

  • Yes — minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip is malicious, so do not opened or extracted it, and delete it. 13 of 74 antivirus engines flag it (family: abmrisk). It behaves as a trojan — malware disguised as something harmless to trick you into running it. If you've already opened or extracted it, see the removal and recovery steps below.
  • minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip is a compressed archive, about 465 KB. Our analysis identifies it as malicious (family: abmrisk) — a trojan — malware disguised as something harmless to trick you into running it. Because a file's name and icon can be faked, the safest way to identify it is by its cryptographic hash (below), not its filename.
  • 13 of 74 antivirus engines flagged minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip, 13 of them as outright malicious. A detection rate at this level is a reliable signal that the file is dangerous.
  • Act quickly. 1) Disconnect the device from the internet to stop the malware communicating or spreading. 2) Run a full scan with reputable anti-malware software (such as Malwarebytes) and quarantine everything it finds. 3) Change your important passwords from a DIFFERENT, clean device — many threats log keystrokes or steal saved credentials. 4) If you bank or shop on this device, watch closely for fraud and alert your bank. 5) For a confirmed infection, the most reliable fix is to back up your personal files and reinstall the operating system for a clean start.
  • To remove minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip: 1) restart into Safe Mode (Safe Mode with Networking if you need to download a tool) so the malware doesn't auto-start. 2) Run a full scan with reputable anti-malware software and let it quarantine or delete the detections. 3) Delete the original minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip file and empty the Recycle Bin/Trash. 4) Check your browser extensions, startup items, and scheduled tasks for anything unfamiliar. 5) Reboot and scan again to confirm it's gone. If detections keep coming back, a clean operating-system reinstall is the most dependable cure.
  • minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip is classified as a trojan — malware disguised as something harmless to trick you into running it. Engines attribute it to the abmrisk family. Knowing the family matters because it tells you the likely impact — data theft, remote control, file encryption, or unwanted ads — and guides the cleanup.
  • The SHA-256 hash of minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip is cf2fc425200ff662cb43485a7fbb65d4b2964f507025ecdf646eb155c2514fe3, and its MD5 is 5ef8f48aee9270ee7ab42e6d25dfa4dd. 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.
  • This report reflects the scan run on July 18, 2026. Because a file's hash never changes, the identity of minecraft-jenny-mod-v3.0.zip 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.
Community classification

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.

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Files are processed in a streaming pass-through — MalwareTips never stores the binary on its servers. Only the scan result (hash, detections, verdict) is retained so the next person who scans the same file gets an instant answer. If you ran this file on your computer and are worried, scan your system with an up-to-date antivirus and change critical passwords from a different device.