Usbstor Diskgeneric-usb-flash-disk--7.76 Upd -
Generic USB flash disks are widely used for storing and transferring data between computers. They are convenient due to their portability, ease of use, and relatively low cost. These devices usually connect via a USB port and are recognized by computers as removable storage devices.
Change USB Ports: Move the drive to a different port to rule out hardware failure at the connection point. Usbstor Diskgeneric-usb-flash-disk--7.76
This will block any drive claiming to be a generic flash disk with firmware 7.76 while allowing other USB drives. Generic USB flash disks are widely used for
Usbstor → Indicates the device is managed by the USB storage driver (usbstor.sys).
DiskGeneric → Manufacturer-reported name; "Generic" suggests a low-cost, unbranded, or third-party controller.
usb-flash-disk → Device type (flash memory over USB).
7.76 → Firmware or controller revision number. Unusually high (typical values: 1.00, 2.00, 5.00) — may indicate a cloned or counterfeit controller ID. Data exfiltration (unbranded USB drives leave less trace
- Data exfiltration (unbranded USB drives leave less trace than branded ones).
- Rubber Ducky attacks (HID spoofing, though that uses a different device class).
- Bootable malware (old firmware like 7.76 may have known exploits).
- Fill this template with actual data if you provide the image or device details (hashes, partition output, file list), or
- Generate a printable PDF version of this report using the filled data.
Expect "legacy" speeds from this drive. In benchmark tests, generic drives of this class often show: Sequential Read: ~10–18 MB/s.