Symantec Endpoint Protection 14.3 Ru7 -

She clicked the alert.

By 1:15 AM, the threat was neutralized. Not killed—because you can’t kill what doesn’t exist on a disk. But contained . Trapped in a digital bell jar of SEP’s own making.

Vale called back. “Report?”

Workstation WS-ACCT-09 (Angela Cortez, Junior Accountant – left at 6:02 PM) Target: Domain Controller DC-01 Payload type: Memory-only reflective DLL. No write. No file. No signature.

Silence. Then: “Block. Now.”

Maya leaned back. Outside, the city was dark. Inside, Symantec Endpoint Protection 14.3 RU7 silently watched the fake domain controller, logging every lie the hacker typed, while the real network slept peacefully for the first time all week.

Then, Screen 4 blinked.

For three seconds, nothing. Then the console lit up like a Christmas tree. The ghost thread tried to reach an IP in Belarus. The injected firewall redirected it to a honeypot—a fake domain controller that RU7 had spun up in memory. The malware started talking. Maya recorded everything: encryption keys, beacon intervals, even a hidden username.