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Unhookingntdll_disk.exe Apr 2026

: It then identified the .text section (the executable code) of the "dirty" ntdll.dll already running in its process memory and overwrote it with the "clean" code from the disk. The Result: Silent Execution

Most modern EDR (Endpoint Detection and Response) tools work by placing "hooks" in ntdll.dll . This DLL is the lowest-level gateway to the Windows kernel. When a program wants to open a file or connect to the internet, it calls a function in ntdll.dll . The EDR’s hooks intercept that call, check if it’s malicious, and then let it pass—or kill it. UnhookingNtdll_disk.exe

With the "clean" code back in place, the EDR’s hooks were gone. The security software was still running, but it was now effectively "blind" to what UnhookingNtdll_disk.exe did next. : It then identified the

: Instead of trying to fight the EDR hooks already present in the memory-loaded version of ntdll.dll , the malware opened the original ntdll.dll file directly from the C:\Windows\System32\ folder on the disk. When a program wants to open a file

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