ATT&CK Technique
Data Encrypted
T1022 · exfiltration
▤ Generate a SIEM detection for T1022
◈ Deployable detections for T1022
⚠ CVEs mapped to T1022
♛ Hunt package for T1022
Data is encrypted before being exfiltrated in order to hide the information that is being exfiltrated from detection or to make the exfiltration less conspicuous upon inspection by a defender. The encryption is performed by a utility, programming library, or custom algorithm on the data itself and is considered separate from any encryption performed by the command and control or file transfer protocol. Common file archive formats that can encrypt files are RAR and zip.
Other exfiltration techniques likely apply as well to transfer the information out of the network, such as Exfiltration Over C2 Channel and Exfiltration Over Alternative Protocol.
LinuxmacOSWindows
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How to use this page - the detection-engineering loop
Attackers have goals (tactics - “get credentials”, “move laterally”) and techniques are the concrete methods they use to reach them. This page is one method - T1022 - broken into everything you need to catch it.
The loop this page is built for (this is the job):
- Understand the behaviour - read the description and the Atomic Tests to see exactly what the attacker does on a host or network.
- Find the telemetry - what data source would reveal it (process creation, registry, network flow, auth logs). Detection Coverage shows which surfaces already have a rule and which are blind.
- Get or write the detection - adapt ready logic (CAR Analytics, SIEM Detections, Falco, or Sigma via Generate a SIEM detection), or author your own.
- Test it - run an Atomic Test in a lab and confirm your rule actually fires. A detection you have not tested is a hope, not coverage.
- Deploy and tune - push it, then watch for false positives and adjust.
What each panel is for:
Atomic Testssafely reproduce the technique in a lab to validate that a detection fires.
Detection Coveragewhich detection surfaces have a rule for this technique; none is a blind spot to close, or simply not applicable (YARA matches files, not network behaviour).
CAR / SIEM / Falcoready-made detection logic (Splunk SPL, Elastic EQL, Sentinel KQL, Falco) you adapt to your own SIEM.
Mitigationsreduce exposure so the technique is harder to use at all - prevent, not just detect.
Actors / Attributionwho actually uses this, so you prioritise by your own threat model.
Attack Path / LOTLwhat attackers do before and after this step, and the legitimate tools they abuse to do it.
Where this fits: you usually arrive here from a CVE (“which techniques does it enable”) and leave with a tested detection deployed. The buttons above jump straight to building one, the deployable rules, the CVEs that use T1022, and a hunt package.
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Detection Coverage
0/9 layersCoverage across standard detection surfaces. Rows marked none have no rule of that type mapped. Some are real blind spots worth closing; others are simply not applicable to this technique (e.g. YARA matches malware files, not network behaviour).
Behavioral / log (Sigma)
none
Analytics (MITRE CAR)
none
Runtime / container (Falco)
none
File / malware (YARA)
none
Network (Suricata/Snort)
none
Vuln scan (Nuclei)
none
SIEM (Splunk ESCU)
none
SIEM (Elastic)
none
SIEM (Azure Sentinel)
none
External lookups - second-class, for what we don’t hold ourselves