

Reads the registry for installed applicationsĪn adversary may attempt to get detailed information about the operating system and hardware, including version, patches, hotfixes, service packs, and architecture.Ĭontains ability to query CPU informationĪdversaries may attempt to gather information about attached peripheral devices and components connected to a computer system. Reads information about supported languages
#Slette mette spil windows
The system time is set and stored by the Windows Time Service within a domain to maintain time synchronization between systems and services in an enterprise network.Ĭontains ability to query the machine timezoneĪdversaries may interact with the Windows Registry to gather information about the system, configuration, and installed software. Malware, tools, or other non-native files dropped or created on a system by an adversary may leave traces behind as to what was done within a network and how.Īdversaries can use methods of capturing user input for obtaining credentials for ] and information ] that include keylogging and user input field interception.Ĭontains ability to retrieve keyboard strokesĪdversaries may attempt to get a listing of open application windows.

#Slette mette spil code
Process injection is a method of executing arbitrary code in the address space of a separate live process.Īllocates virtual memory in a remote process
#Slette mette spil driver
Opens the Kernel Security Device Driver (KsecDD) of Windows Loadable Kernel Modules (or LKMs) are pieces of code that can be loaded and unloaded into the kernel upon demand. Installs hooks/patches the running process Windows processes often leverage application programming interface (API) functions to perform tasks that require reusable system resources.

The analysis thereby provides both a new scientific and analytical approach to cluster analysis, as well as a detailed analysis of the discourses and practices which shaped the NorCOM cluster and its organizations and people over time, which is of interest to both people who were part of the cluster, people in other clusters as well as cluster researchers.

Foucault’s ideas on genealogy and archaeology are operationalized into an new analytical framework which makes it possible to analyse the discourses and practices which made the people in the subsidiary the subjects they were in relation to their work with specific behaviours, and what role the cluster played in this process. This thesis presents a Foucauldian analysis of how the people within one MNC subsidiary, Texas Instruments Denmark A/S, were constructed as subjects in relation to their work, and how the NorCOM cluster of which the organization was part was constructed as a cluster.
