IDA Pro Plugin Now Available to the Community

Intezer

The Intezer Analyze IDA Pro plugin is now available to community users!

IDA Pro is the most common reverse engineering platform for disassembling computer software. The Intezer Analyze IDA Pro plugin accelerates reverse engineering by enriching every function of disassembled machine code with information about where the code was seen previously.

  • Save investigation time by filtering out common code and libraries, allowing you to focus only on a file’s malicious and unique code
  • Detect a similar function or part of a function to attribute a malware family or threat actor

With this information, the reverse engineer can immediately focus on the relevant parts of the binary, reducing the analysis time from hours—and sometimes even days—to minutes.

See the Plugin in Action!

Dridex

Take these two simple steps to start using the plugin:

  1. Make sure you have an Intezer Analyze community account. You can quickly register for free here
  2. Click on IDA plugin located at the top right corner

What’s the difference between the community and enterprise plugins?

The community plugin allows for one daily investigation, whereas enterprise users have the ability to process more files.

Get started using the community plugin or upgrade to the enterprise edition

Intezer

Count on Intezer AI SOC to triage, investigate and respond to every alert at unmatched speed and accuracy.

Recommended Blogs
7MIN READ

Introducing Custom Agents: Automate your SOC, your way

Add your own agents and automations on top of the ones Intezer runs out of the box, take more of the manual work off your analysts, and tailor AI SOC to the way your team actually operates.
11MIN READ

The other half of the AI SOC: Intezer, now inside your AI workspace

Your team already lives in, Claude, Codex, Cursor, etc. Discover how to transform them into true security workspaces.
23MIN READ

How attackers are gaining access to LLM inference

Threat actors are wiring live LLM APIs into malware to generate malicious logic at runtime, and this research maps the five routes they use to access AI models for free.