🔺Bitfrost -- remote access Trojan (RAT) that infected Windows clients by changing, creating and altering components.
🔺Tiny Banker -- allowed attackers to steal sensitive financial information. Researchers in the Center for Strategic and International Studies Security Group identified 'Tinba' in 2012 after two dozen major U.S. banks were infected.
🔺FakeAV Trojan -- embedded itself in the Windows system tray and continuously delivered an official-looking pop-up window, alerting the user to a problem with the computer. When users followed directions to fix the problem, they actually downloaded more malware.
🔺Magic Lantern -- a keystroke logging Trojan created by the FBI around the turn of the century to assist with criminal surveillance.
🔺Zeus -- a financial services crimeware toolkit that allows a hacker to build his own Trojan horse. First detected in 2007, the Trojans built with Zeus still remain the most dangerous banking Trojans in the world, using form grabbing, keylogging and polymorphic variants of the Trojan that use drive-by downloads to capture victim credentials.