vboxsds.exe threat report

MD5 1bda333902cbfbfe8e6975f847bf3735
Latest seen 2026-03-03 23:01:38 (2 months ago)
First seen 2026-02-19 23:01:07 (3 months ago)
Size 1 MB
Publisher Oracle Corporation

GridinSoft Anti-Malware detection

Detected by GridinSoft before you download

The current ThreatInfo record shows this exact file hash detected as General Threat. Download GridinSoft Anti-Malware to scan the device, confirm whether this file is present, and remove the detected object if it is found.

Detection name
General Threat
Recommended action
Scan and remove
Last analysis
2026-03-03 23:01:38 (2 months ago)
File hash
1bda333902cbfbfe8e6975f847bf3735
Download Anti-Malware

Why it matters

Why GridinSoft flags this file

Detection

GridinSoft identifies the sample as General Threat.

Timeline

First seen 2026-02-19 23:01:07 (3 months ago); latest analysis 2026-03-03 23:01:38 (2 months ago).

Publisher context

Company metadata: Oracle Corporation. Product metadata: Oracle VM VirtualBox.

Observed locations

ThreatInfo has seen this file in user or system paths listed below. Unexpected locations increase the need for local verification.

Recommended action

What to do next

  1. Compare the MD5 above with the file found on the device.
  2. Check whether the file appears in the observed locations or under one of the alternate names.
  3. Run GridinSoft Anti-Malware to confirm the detection and remove the file if it is present.

vboxsds.exe is a Windows file recorded in the ThreatInfo database. It is associated with Oracle VM VirtualBox. The reported company name is Oracle Corporation. The current detection status is General Threat, based on the latest analysis from 2026-03-03 23:01:38 (2 months ago).

If vboxsds.exe appears on your computer unexpectedly, treat it as suspicious. Check its location, digital signature, and recent system changes before allowing it to run. A full anti-malware scan is recommended when this file is detected as General Threat.

Product Name: Oracle VM VirtualBox
Company Name: Oracle Corporation
MD5: 1bda333902cbfbfe8e6975f847bf3735
Size: 1 MB
First Published: 2026-02-19 23:01:07 (3 months ago)
Latest Published: 2026-03-03 23:01:38 (2 months ago)
Status: General Threat (on last analysis)
Analysis Date: 2026-03-03 23:01:38 (2 months ago)
vboxsds.exe detection screenshot

The screenshot is a visual record of a GridinSoft Anti-Malware detection for this sample. Use the hash and metadata above as the primary identifiers when comparing the file on your system.

%sysdrive%\archivos programa (all)
%sysdrive%\archivos programa (all)
%sysdrive%\archivos programa (all)
%sysdrive%\archivos programa (all)
%sysdrive%\archivos programa (all)

ThreatInfo has observed vboxsds.exe in the locations listed above. Files found in temporary folders, user profile folders, startup locations, or unusual application directories should be reviewed more carefully than files installed under a known program directory.

100.0%

The strongest geographic signal for this file is Bolivia with 100.0% of observed hits. Geographic distribution can help identify targeted campaigns, regional software bundles, or where a file is most commonly reported.

Windows 10 100.0%

The most common operating system signal for vboxsds.exe is Windows 10 with 100.0% of observed hits. If your system differs from the common profile, check whether the file was introduced by a specific installer, archive, or removable device.

vboxsds.exe is identified as pe for 64 systems. The subsystem is Windows GUI. PE header values are useful for triage, especially when they do not match the expected publisher, product, or release timeline.

Subsystem: Windows GUI
PE Type: pe
OS Bitness: 64
Image Base: 0x0000000140000000
Entry Address: 0x0000711c

PE Sections:

Name Size of data MD5
.text 32256 6f61bf4968f101e5ef0f78ba654fc3c9
.rdata 37888 ca1d7f043f59c43cbcd5a640af12d1fd
.data 1536 33bb421f649ba29980de4a076604ae23
.pdata 3072 af04ecf34140a575c63b13954f0644af
.rsrc 641024 7e7894a53f2c2530997c93df11f9263b
.reloc 602112 2d417f829a50869299d74ae593e2bbf0

PE section names and hashes can reveal packing, injected resources, or unusual build artifacts. Sections with uncommon names, very large raw data, or hashes that differ from a trusted copy deserve additional review.

More information: