Threat intelligence firm AlienVault announced the launch of a free endpoint scanning service, called OTX Endpoint Threat Hunter.

Threat intelligence firm AlienVault announced the launch of a free endpoint scanning service, called OTX Endpoint Threat Hunter, that allows private firms and security experts to identify threats in their networks.

“OTX Endpoint Threat Hunter is a free threat-scanning service in Open Threat Exchange that allows you to detect malware and other threats on your critical endpoints using OTX threat intelligence. This means that you can now harness the world’s largest open threat intelligence community to assess your endpoints against real-world attacks on demand or as new attacks appear in the wild—all. for. free.” states the announcement published by AlienVault.

The OTX Endpoint Threat Hunter service is part of the AlienVault Open Threat Exchange (OTX) platform that currently provides more than 19 million threat indicators contributed by over 80,000 users.

This means that users can assess their infrastructure by using threat information collected by the world’s largest open threat intelligence community.

OTX Endpoint Threat Hunter is a free threat-scanning service that allows users to detect malware and other threats on endpoints using OTX threat intelligence.

The new service uses lightweight endpoint agent, the AlienVault Agent, that executes predefined queries against one or more OTX pulses, the agent can be installed on Windows, Linux and other endpoint devices.

Each pulse includes a complete set of data on a specific threat, including IoCs.

OTX Endpoint Threat Hunter is directly integrated in OTX, this means that users can start using it without the use of other security tools as explained by AlienVault.

If you haven’t already, register with the Open Threat Exchange (OTX). It’s free to join.

Download and install the AlienVault Agent on the Windows or Linux devices* you want to monitor. The AlienVault Agent is immediately ready to find threats.

Launch a query on any endpoint from OTX by selecting a pre-defined query that looks for IOCs in one or more OTX pulses.

The AlienVault Agent executes the query, and within moments you can view the results of the query display across all your endpoints on a summary page within OTX.

OTX Endpoint Threat Hunter can also be used to scan for processes running without a binary on disk, scan for crypto-mining activity and scan for installed malicious / annoying Chrome extensions.

AlienVault has described several scenarios where Endpoint Threat Hunter can be effective, including:

Identify whether your endpoints have been compromised in a major malware attack.

Assess the threat posture of your critical endpoints.

Query your endpoints for other suspicious activities.

Users can also scan all the endpoints against multiple pulses at once, the OTX Endpoint Threat Hunter allows to scan against pulses as well as YARA rules in multiple ways:

Scan all AlienVault-contributed Pulses

Scan by all AlienVault-contributed YARA Rules (Linux only)

Scan by all pulses you subscribe to (all pulses updated in the last 7 days)

Scan by all pulses you subscribe to (all pulses updated in the last 30 days)

Pierluigi Paganini

(Security Affairs – OTX Endpoint Threat Hunter, cyber threats)

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