This project covers the need of a group of IT Security Researches to have a single repository where different Yara signatures are compiled, classified and kept as up to date as possible, and begin as an open source community for collecting Yara rules. Our Yara ruleset is under the GNU-GPLv2 license and open to any user or organization, as long as you use it under this license.
Yara is being increasingly used, but knowledge about the tool and its usage is dispersed in many different places. Yara Rules project aims to be the meeting point for Yara users, gathering together a ruleset as complete as possible thus providing users a quick way to get Yara ready for usage.
We hope this project is useful for the Security Community and all Yara Users, and are looking forward to your feedback. Join this community by subscribing to our mailing list.
If you’re interested in sharing your Yara rules with us and the Security Community, you can join our mailing list, send a message to our Twitter account or send a pull request here.
Twitter account: https://twitter.com/yararules
Mail list : http://list.yararules.com/mailman/listinfo/yararules.com.signatures
In this section you will find Yara Rules aimed to detect anti debug and anti virtualization techniques used by malware to evade automated analyisis.
In this section you will find Yara rules aimed to detect the existence of cryptographic algoritms.
In this section you will find Yara Rules to be used with documents to find if they have been crafted to leverage malicious code.
In this section you will find Yara rules specialised on the indentification of well-known malware.
In this section you will find Yara Rules aimed to detect well-known sofware packers, that can be used by malware to hide itself.
Webpage: http://yararules.com
Twitter account: https://twitter.com/yararules
Mail list : http://list.yararules.com/mailman/listinfo/yararules.com.signatures