There is no single universally famous paper titled exactly "osa.dll disabled." However, based on security research and reverse engineering literature, here are the most relevant types of papers and documented findings where disabling osa.dll (Office Startup Assistant) is a key technique or finding: osa.dll was a legitimate DLL used by older versions of Microsoft Office (Office 2000, XP, 2003) to speed up startup. Attackers discovered they could replace or redirect osa.dll to achieve persistence or bypass security tools.