From 8e014674afe0114daad446c0e34a228d0739f9d0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andras Iklody Date: Wed, 20 Jun 2018 09:45:16 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Fixed typo --- clusters/threat-actor.json | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/clusters/threat-actor.json b/clusters/threat-actor.json index 0d8182a..4fdb789 100644 --- a/clusters/threat-actor.json +++ b/clusters/threat-actor.json @@ -2704,7 +2704,7 @@ }, { "value": "Thrip", - "description": "Symntec have been monitoring Thrip since 2013 when they uncovered a spying campaign being orchestrated from systems based in China. Since their initial discovery, the group has changed its tactics and broadened the range of tools it used. Initially, it relied heavily on custom malware, but in this most recent wave of attacks, which began in 2017, the group has switched to a mixture of custom malware and living off the land tools. All of these tools, with the exception of Mimikatz (which is almost always used maliciously), have legitimate uses.", + "description": "Symantec have been monitoring Thrip since 2013 when they uncovered a spying campaign being orchestrated from systems based in China. Since their initial discovery, the group has changed its tactics and broadened the range of tools it used. Initially, it relied heavily on custom malware, but in this most recent wave of attacks, which began in 2017, the group has switched to a mixture of custom malware and living off the land tools. All of these tools, with the exception of Mimikatz (which is almost always used maliciously), have legitimate uses.", "meta": { "refs": [ "https://www.symantec.com/blogs/threat-intelligence/thrip-hits-satellite-telecoms-defense-targets"