“You are the last uninfected node in this sector. Seven zero-day exploits attempted against your kernel in the last hour. Auto-Containment engaged. Valkyrie verdict: Malicious. Do not disconnect from the firewall.”
Elara leaned back in her chair. Outside her window, sirens wailed as the city’s banking systems collapsed. Her neighbor pounded on the door, screaming that his identity had been stolen.
“Unknown application attempting to inject shellcode into svchost.exe. Parent process: ‘System Idle Process’ – Anomaly detected. Blocking.” comodo internet security suite
“Inbound connection from 94.123.xx.xx. Application: lsass.exe (spoofed). Recognizing known attack pattern: ‘EternalBlack’ derivative. This IP has been flagged by Comodo’s Valkyrie AI as a Command & Control server.”
She looked at her screen. The little green Comodo shield was still there, quietly spinning. “You are the last uninfected node in this sector
Elara never thought much about the little green box in her system tray. It sat there, a simple shield icon next to her clock, labeled Comodo . To her, it was just a nagging parent—always popping up to ask, “Do you really want to run this?” She always clicked “Yes” without reading.
“Comodo Internet Security Suite – Your system is secure. 0 threats found. Next scheduled scan: Tomorrow, 2:00 AM.” Valkyrie verdict: Malicious
A final message appeared, this one in plain English, from the Comodo module: