ESET launches eCrime Reports to track ransomware and infostealer attacks

eset-launches-ecrime-reports-to-track-ransomware-and-infostealer-attacks
ESET launches eCrime Reports to track ransomware and infostealer attacks
ESET eCrime Reports

Security firm ESET has introduced a brand new addition to its Threat Intelligence portfolio called eCrime Reports, that could potentially give security teams far deeper insight into ransomware and infostealer activity. The reports provide detailed data on how attacks unfold, offering information that could help organizations track and respond to cybercriminal operations more effectively.

Ransomware groups and infostealer campaigns put pressure on businesses to analyze threats quickly and understand how attackers operate. ESET’s eCrime Reports collect telemetry and incident data to show the stages of real intrusions, including affiliate activity, attack timelines, and the tools used during breaches.

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“For over 30 years, ESET has helped governments, channel companies, and businesses stay protected from the world’s most advanced cybersecurity threats,” said Roman Kováč, Chief Research Officer at ESET. “Our newly launched eCrime Reports combine technical depth with functional defense guidance — based on feedback from ESET’s threat researchers around the world. This means law enforcement, IT, and security teams don’t just read about threats; they gain insights needed to anticipate attacks, close gaps, and strengthen defenses proactively. Focused on ransomware and infostealers, these eCrime reports help organizations to strengthen their overall cybersecurity postures, particularly in high-stakes environments.”

There are two versions of the service available. ESET Threat Intelligence eCrime Reports offers curated reports built on proprietary telemetry gathered from real incidents worldwide. The Advanced tier expands on that with additional tools and integrations intended for security analysts and incident response teams.

The reports track attacker tactics, techniques, and procedures while mapping connections between campaigns and criminal groups. By following these patterns, ESET says its analysis can uncover clusters of activity tied to ransomware operators or infostealer networks.

The information goes beyond monitoring leak sites associated with malware-as-a-service and ransomware-as-a-service operations, combining incident data with intelligence feeds covering phishing URLs, cryptoscams, malicious email attachments, smishing campaigns, and Android infostealers.

eCrime Reports

Each report includes several sections covering recent activity and technical findings. Activity summaries provide an overview of ongoing ransomware and infostealer campaigns, along with observed targeting patterns and indicators of compromise.

A technical analysis section examines specific threat actors and campaigns in depth, outlining the attack chain from initial access through data theft. These reports also document infrastructure used by attackers and include mapping to MITRE ATT&CK techniques.

Organizations will also receive a monthly digest summarizing trends in ransomware and infostealer activity, and offering a concise overview for executives and decision-makers involved in assessing cyber risk across their organizations.

Reports will also be accompanied by a continuous eCrime feed that delivers curated indicators of compromise tied to ransomware groups and affiliated operators. This is distributed in the STIX and TAXII data-sharing formats widely used in security operations.

Advanced-tier subscribers will also gain access to additional capabilities, such as the ESET AI Advisor, a generative AI tool built on the company’s machine learning work that helps analysts interpret threat intelligence and incident data more quickly.

“Quality is essential in threat intelligence data,” said Kováč. “ESET Threat Intelligence customers are able to reduce maintenance and manpower associated with processing feeds — cutting through information overload associated with competitor threat intelligence offerings. Rather than struggling to sift through huge, noncurated external datasets, ESET’s services allow organizations to quickly identify and prioritize emerging business risks and previously unknown threats — giving them more time to accelerate incident response, mount an effective defense, and implement an overall more proactive cybersecurity posture.”

You can find out more about the new addition here.

What do you think about ESET’s dedicated eCrime Reports for threat intelligence? Let us know in the comments.