GhostTree Makes Windows Defender Stop Scanning With Two Lines of Code
GhostTree makes Windows Defender stop scanning. Two lines of code, no admin rights, and malware sitting right next to it goes completely undetected. A Varonis researcher published it today, confirmed it works, and Microsoft’s first response was that this does not count as a security issue. Then they patched it anyway.
Windows lets you create a folder that points to another folder. The operating system follows that pointer as if the destination is real. Most applications and scanners follow junctions transparently unless they explicitly check for reparse points, which most do not. The feature has been built in for decades and has a perfectly legitimate purpose: backward compatibility, keeping old software happy when file locations change. The Windows name for it is an NTFS junction. The part that matters for this attack: any standard user account can create one. No admin rights needed. Write access to a folder is enough, and most users already have that in their own profile and in shared directories.









