Malware like Emotet or Qakbot often drops intermediate stages into %TEMP% or %APPDATA% with semi-randomized names during the "injection" phase of an infection.
Since the filename implies "injection," these papers detail the most common methods used by such executables: injection_3DE7000.exe
While there is no specific "paper" dedicated to that exact filename, the naming convention strongly points toward techniques. If you are researching this file due to a security alert, the following resources cover the behaviors it likely exhibits: Technical Research on Process Injection Malware like Emotet or Qakbot often drops intermediate
The string 3DE7000 is often a or a checksum . Files with these names are frequently seen in: Files with these names are frequently seen in:
: This provides a comprehensive breakdown of the sub-techniques (like Dynamic-link Library Injection and Portable Executable Injection) that "injection_3DE7000.exe" likely uses.
Providing the hash would allow for a search in malware databases to find the actual "paper" or threat report associated with the underlying malware family.
Services like Any.Run or Joe Sandbox often rename dropped payloads based on their memory offsets.