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Vidar

Vidar Sample Detected: file

April 16, 2026 · ThreatChain Research Team · 3 min read
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Table of Contents

A new Vidar sample was identified by threat intelligence feeds on 2026-04-16 15:05:16. This post breaks down what we know about the specific sample, how to recognize related activity on your network, and what to do if you or your organization might be affected.

The Sample at a Glance

Field Value
SHA-256 d6446f2803444bd2200d48a01a9ad7d487e67e8e831c9cd13f89cbfec17fd4e2
File name file
File type exe
Size 2.14 MB
Origin (first observed) US
First seen 2026-04-16 15:05:16
Family Vidar
Tags dropped-by-GCleaner, exe, signed, U, UNIQ.file, Vidar
VirusTotal detection 24/76 engines flagged malicious

What Vidar Does

Vidar is an information stealer derived from the Arkei family. It targets crypto wallets, 2FA backups, browser passwords, and session cookies — and it's often dropped by malvertising campaigns targeting users searching for popular software downloads.

Seeing this family on your network — or finding a file matching this hash — is a red flag. Vidar samples are typically distributed through phishing emails, malvertising, fake software downloads, or cracked installers. Once executed, the malware usually establishes persistence on the host, harvests credentials and sensitive data, and establishes an outbound channel to command-and-control infrastructure operated by the attackers.

🔍 Search this threat on ThreatChain threatchain.io

Detection Landscape

Multiple security vendors have weighed in on this specific sample:

Indicators of Compromise

If you're hunting for this sample or related Vidar activity, here are the concrete indicators to feed into your SIEM, EDR, or host-based searches:

How to Check If You're Affected

  1. Search your endpoint logs for the SHA-256 d6446f2803444bd2200d48a01a9ad7d487e67e8e831c9cd13f89cbfec17fd4e2. Most EDR platforms support historical hash searches across all monitored hosts.
  2. Check for the filename file in recently downloaded files, email attachments, and installer bundles.
  3. Look for outbound connections to uncommon TLDs or newly registered domains — Vidar typically beacons to command-and-control infrastructure shortly after execution.
  4. Review scheduled tasks and registry run keys — this family commonly establishes persistence through standard Windows autorun locations.
  5. Run an updated AV or EDR scan across potentially affected hosts. Because this sample is already in public threat intel feeds, current signatures should flag it.

What to Do If You Find It

If you find evidence of this sample or related activity on your systems:

  1. Isolate the affected host from the network immediately to prevent lateral movement.
  2. Capture memory and disk images before rebooting. Reboots destroy critical forensic evidence, especially in RAM.
  3. Rotate credentials that may have been exposed — browser-saved passwords, VPN credentials, SSH keys, and any service accounts used on the affected host. Vidar frequently targets these.
  4. Check for secondary payloads. Vidar is often a stepping stone for additional malware including ransomware or banking trojans.
  5. Report the incident to your security team. For larger organizations, consider notifying your regional CERT.

Free Threat Lookups

You can verify any suspicious hash against the ThreatChain database for free — no signup, no API key required. Paste any MD5, SHA-1, or SHA-256 at threatchain.io/lookup and get results across multiple intel sources in seconds.

For cross-referencing this specific sample, you can also look it up directly on MalwareBazaar where the original submission and vendor analysis is recorded.

Sample Available for Researchers

This sample is available as a password-protected ZIP (password: infected) for security researchers.

Download Sample

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