Antiy AVL SDK Anti-Virus Engine Upgrade Announcement (20260411)
Based on the principles of transparency, accessibility, usability, verifiability and perceptibility of security capabilities, Antiy releases weekly updates of the AVL SDK anti-virus engine and the full set of capabilities to the public every week.
1.Weekly Update
Statistical period: April 4, 2026 ~ April 10, 2026
Antiy AVL SDK anti-virus engine released a total of 84 virus database updates this week, with an average of 12 updates per day, adding 27 new detectable malware families, 5,107 new detectable malicious code variants, and 17,390 new detection rules.
The following table shows the TOP5 newly detectable malicious code families:
| Number | Virus Name | Virus Description |
| 1 | Trojan/Win32.DeviceDisabler | This family is a type of Trojan, mainly spreading by being bundled with seemingly legitimate software, as attachments in phishing emails, or through malicious website links. Its primary purpose is to infiltrate user systems, steal sensitive information (such as bank accounts, passwords, and personal identity information), and establish backdoors for remote attackers to control. |
| 2 | Trojan/Linux.MikeDor[Backdoor] | This family is a type of Trojan that enters the victim’s computer system by deceiving users or carrying other malicious software. Once infected, it runs in the background and steals sensitive information in a hidden manner, monitors user activities, and sends data to remote servers. |
| 3 | Trojan/Win64.Shirna[Ransom] | This family is a type of Trojan, usually spread through phishing emails, malicious downloads or exploiting vulnerabilities. Once infected, the malware will encrypt the user’s files and demand ransom for the decryption key, posing a serious threat to the computer system. |
| 4 | Trojan/JS.SilentStealer[PSW] | This family is a type of Trojan, mainly spread through phishing emails, malicious download links or being carried by software. After infecting the user’s computer, it will hide itself and steal the user’s sensitive information, such as account passwords and bank card information, thereby endangering the user’s privacy and security. |
| 5 | Trojan/MacOS.Bezdez | This family is a type of Trojan targeting the MacOS system, entering the victim’s computer system by deceiving users or carrying other malicious software. Once infected, it will run in the background and steal sensitive information in a hidden manner, monitor the user’s activities and send data to remote servers. |
(According to the HASH number of family samples within the period)
For more related content, please visit www.virusview.net (the Computer Virus Encyclopedia).
2. Full Detection Capabilities
As of 24:00 on April 10, 2026, the AVL SDK anti-virus engine can detect 18,538,008 malware variants of 57,692 malware families distributed in 8 basic categories, with a total of 41,787,279 detection rules.
The detection capabilities and the number of rules classified by malicious code are as follows:
| Type | Detectable Malicious Code (Types) | Detection rules (Items) |
| Infectious viruses | 59,598 | 6,806,427 |
| Worms | 314,636 | 3,938,468 |
| Trojans | 13,486,873 | 25,467,742 |
| Hacking tools | 457,125 | 362,224 |
| Risk tools | 1,205,582 | 2,213,064 |
| Rogue software | 3,014,157 | 2,998,177 |
| Junk files | 11 | 1,078 |
| Test programs (for self-test) | 26 | 99 |
| Total | 18,538,008 | 41,787,279 |
Preprocessing Capabilities (partial) :
There are 31 types of shells that can be unpacked (accurate to the type), and 132 packages that can be disassembled, including all common packages and self-extracting packages.
Supporting Knowledge Output Capabilities:
For malware payloads, the AVL SDK and the accompanying malware knowledge base can output 533 key behavior mapping tags, covering 139 categories of ATT&CK tactical tags, with a coverage rate of 64.29%, basically covering all the statically detectable tags in the ATT&CK framework.
3. Be on Guard Against These Virus Families This Week
This week, the focus should be on the risk of imitation and poisoning attacks in the open-source AI ecosystem. In recent days, the risk of imitation poisoning attacks in the open-source AI ecosystem has shown a sharp increase trend. OpenClaw (the lobster) has become the main target of attackers. Within a short period of time, multiple imitation incidents have occurred, with the download payload being the Swimming Snake. The attackers registered domain names that are highly similar to the official ones, built interfaces, logos, and fully replicated the functions of the imitated sites, and used search engine SEO techniques to precisely induce users to click and download. The installation package after download embeds a variant backdoor of the Swimming Snake family. Recently, the phishing methods of the Swimming Snake family mainly involve using encrypted payloads disguised as image files to execute Shellcode and ultimately establish a connection with the remote control Trojan and the C2 server.
Appendix: Introduction to Antiy AVL SDK Anti-Virus Engine
Antiy AVL SDK anti-virus engine is a threat detection capability middleware developed by Antiy for all architectures and system platforms. By embedding the AVL SDK, Antiy products and ecosystem partners’ products can acquire virus and malicious code detection capabilities, and receive continuous updates through the virus database.
For eight malicious code categories including infectious viruses, worms, Trojans, hacking tools, gray software, risky software, junk files, and test files, it accurately identifies and detects over 50,000 families and 18 million malicious code variants. The detection capability fully covers all known malicious codes and strictly adheres to the CARO convention. The output is structured and named in sections by classification, environment, and family, and based on the behavioral capabilities of malicious samples, it outputs nearly a hundred types of malicious behavior tags for typical malicious behaviors such as encryption ransomware, data theft, remote control, botnet programs, and mining. Antiy Engine can recognize over 300 file formats and conduct in-depth preprocessing on compilable executable formats such as PE and ELF. It also performs recursive unpacking of various packages (including self-extracting archives), and conduct structural analysis of compound documents such as OFFICE and ACAD files that may contain embedded scripts or vulnerability-prone formats. This ensures high robustness against malicious code. Antiy Engine also comes with a trusted file signature library, supporting the product to implement security policies based on blacklist and whitelist controls, significantly enhancing the difficulty for attackers.
Antiy’s detection capabilities can be fully deployed locally. Antiy automatically analyzes and processes over 2 million new file objects on average every day and releases a virus database update every two hours. It also provides support services such as cloud detection, cloud analysis, and computer virus encyclopedia.
Antiy AVL SDK is available in various versions such as traditional PC hosts, smart terminals, network traffic, IT application innovation systems, industrial systems, and unmanned systems. It provides threat detection capabilities for scenarios including host system and workload security, network traffic security, business flow security, email and file service security, etc. It fully supports various architectures such as X86, ARM, MIPS (including Cavium), RISC, and PowerPC, supports a variety of mainstream operating systems including domestic operating systems, Linux, and Windows, as well as real-time industrial operating systems like Vxwork. It also supports high-speed detection in backbone network scenarios.
Antiy AVL SDK empowers over 100 industry partners. In addition to Antiy’s own product deployment, Antiy Engine has cumulatively covered more than 4 billion nodes (including mobile terminals, secure and controllable PC endpoints, cloud-native nodes, network devices, network security devices, etc.), providing inherent security detection capabilities for mobile phones and smart terminals. The main partners using Antiy Engine include mobile phone enterprises such as Huawei, Xiaomi, Honor, VIVO and OPPO, large Internet enterprises such as Ant Financial, and several listed cybersecurity companies. Partner products using Antiy Engine have won internationally renowned evaluation awards such as AV-TEST and NSS Labs. The “L Tomahawk” logo of AVL SDK has become a symbol of reliable anti-virus capabilities.
All of Antiy’s products, including but not limited to IEP security protection system product family, Unified Workload Protect, Persistent Threat Detection System (PTD), Persistent Threat Analysis System (PTA), Attack Capture System, Qingzhu Zhiyu WAF, etc., all use Antiy anti-virus engine.
The AVL SDK anti-virus engine has been under development since 2001 and has undergone significant version upgrades and iterations. It has successively received support from key national initiatives, including: the Ministry of Science and Technology’s Innovation Fund for Technology-based Firms (2004), the Ministry of Science and Technology’s National High-Tech R&D Program (863 Program) (2006), the National Development and Reform Commission’s Information Security Special Project (2008), and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology’s Engineering Special Project (2019). The mobile version of AVL SDK won the 2014 AV-TEST Best Protection Award for Mobile Devices. Products powered by the AVL SDK, Antiy PTD and PTA, won first place in both the first and second National Cybersecurity Technology Challenge competitions hosted by the National Computer Network Emergency Response Technical Team/Coordination Center of China (CNCERT/CC).
