7MS #258: Speaking at Secure360 - Part 2
7 Minute Security18 Touko 2017

7MS #258: Speaking at Secure360 - Part 2

Intro

I mentioned last week that I was speaking at the Secure360 conference here in the Twin Cities, and at that time I was preparing a talk called Pentesting 101: No Hoodie Required. I was so nervous that I've basically spent the last week breathing heavily into paper bags and wishing I was on sedatives.

But I have good news to report in today's episode, friends! The talk was very well received and the attendees didn't get out torches and pitchforks! #winning! So today's episode (audio below) talks more about the public speaking experiences and highlights some lessons learned:

Things I'd do again next time
  • I'd not tempt the demo gods and still pre-record my hacking movies ahead of time. I saw some people do live demos of very technical things and it did not go well for a few of them :-(

  • I would still spend way too many hours cutting together my movies in iMovie so that they followed a good tempo when presented live

  • I would still have a copy of my presentation on two different laptops, 3 USB thumb drives, a cloud copy, and a copy sent to the Secure 360 folks just in case. Backups, backups, backups - am I right?

What I'd do differently next time
  • I'd hopefully have the preso done a few days (weeks, even!) ahead of time and practice it in front of colleagues to get some feedback.

  • I'd still have a theme to the presentation, but rather than something specific like Terminator 2, maybe I'd go even more general and pick a movie/character that could appeal even more to the masses.

  • I wouldn't worry so much about having a presentation that "nails it" for everybody. That's just not possible! We're all coming from different backgrounds and skillsets. It's not gonna be a home run for everybody.

Jaksot(684)

7MS #420: Tales of Internal Pentest Pwnage - Part 17

7MS #420: Tales of Internal Pentest Pwnage - Part 17

Today's episode is a fun tale of pentest pwnage! Interestingly, to me this pentest had a ton of time-sponging issues on the front end, but the TTDA (Time to Domain Admin) was maybe my fastest ever. I had to actually roll a fresh Kali VM to upload to the customer site, and I learned (the hard way) to make that VM disk as lean as possible. I got away with a 15 gig drive, and the OS+tools+updates took up about 12 gig. One of the biggest lessons I learned from this experience is to make sure that not only is your Kali box updated before you take it to a customer site (see this script), but you should make sure you install all the tool dependencies beforehand as well (specifically, Eyewitness, Impacket and MITM6). This pentest was also extremely time-boxed, so I tried to get as much bang out of it as possible. This included: Capturing hashes with Responder Checking for "Kerberoastable" accounts (GetUserSPNs.py -request -dc-ip x.x.x.x domain/user) Check for MS14-025 (see this article) Check for MS17-010 (nmap -Pn -p445 --open --max-hostgroup 3 --script smb-vuln-ms17-010 192.168.0.0/24 -oA vulnerable-2-eblue) and try this method of exploiting it Check for DNS zone transfer (dnsrecon -d name.of.fqdn -t axf) Test for egress filtering of ports 1-1024 Took a backup of AD "the Microsoft way" and then cracked with secretsdump: sudo python ./secretsdump.py -ntds /loot/Active\ Directory/ntds.dit -system /loot/registry/SYSTEM -hashes lmhash:nthash LOCAL -outputfile /loot/ad-pw-dump

26 Kesä 202044min

7MS #419: Eating the Security Dog Food

7MS #419: Eating the Security Dog Food

Today we're talking about eating the security dog food! What do I mean by that? Well, a lot of security companies I worked for in the past preached to clients about the importance of having a good security program, but didn't have one of their own! I'm trying to break that pattern now that I'm in a position to lead an information security program for 7MS. In today's episode we talk about getting your company started with a good set of infosec policies/procedures. First up is a "mothership" infosec policy with the following sub-policies inside it: Acceptable Use Data Protection and Privacy Physical Security Tools and Technology Training and Awareness Reporting Oh, and the song I jazz/scat/sang coming out of the jingle was If I Were a Dog

17 Kesä 202040min

7MS #418: Securing Your Mental Health

7MS #418: Securing Your Mental Health

SafePass.me is the only enterprise solution to protect organizations against credential stuffing and password spraying attacks. Visit safepass.me for more details, and tell them 7 Minute Security sent you to get a 10% discount! Today's episode is all about mental health! I talk about some of my challenges with stress/anxiety and how I finally put on my big boy pants, dropped some misconceptions and decided to do something about it. Additionally, this episode contains references to: Jon Secada Arsenio Hall Lone Wolf McQuade

11 Kesä 202044min

7MS #417: Vulnerability Scanning Tips and Tricks

7MS #417: Vulnerability Scanning Tips and Tricks

Today's episode is all about getting the most value out of your vulnerability scans, including: Why, IMHO you should only do credentialed scans Policy tweaks that will keep servers from tipping over and printers from printing novels of gibberish ;-) How to make your scan report more actionable and less unruly Turning up logging to 11 (use with caution!) A small tweak to an external scan policy that can result in the difference between a successful or failed scan The nessusd.rules file is awesome for excluding specific hosts and services from your scans

4 Kesä 202043min

7MS #416: Pi-hole 5.0

7MS #416: Pi-hole 5.0

This podcast is sponsored by Arctic Wolf, whose Concierge Security teams Monitor, Detect and Respond to Cyber threats 24/7 for thousands of customers around the world. Arctic Wolf. Redefining cybersecurity. Visit Arcticwolf.com/7MS to learn more. Today we're talking about some of my favorite features of Pi-hole 5.0. Including: WARNING! WARNING! Upgrading from 4.x is a one-way operation! Per-client blocking (you can setup, for example, a group machines called "kids" and apply specific domain block/allow lists and domains to them) More granular detail (especially if there are issues) when blocklists get updated Better, richer debug log output I also talk about a great companion for yor Pi-hole: a command-line Internet speed test! Hat tip to Javali over at the 7MS forums who told me about this. Additionally, I briefly mention "Hashy" (the nickname of my password cracking rig), give you some stay-at-home streaming TV show recommendations, and give you a quick house rebuild update!

28 Touko 202035min

7MS #415: Cyber News

7MS #415: Cyber News

Today's episode kicks off a fun little experiment where my pal Joe Skeen and I cover some of the week's interesting security news stories, how they might affect you, and what you can do to make you and your company more secure. This week's stories: Salt stack RCE (Daily Swig / Cyber Scoop) Malware uses Corporate MDM as attack vector (Checkpoint) Critical vulns in Sharefile (Citrix) Shareholders sue Labcorp over their 'persistent' failure to secure data (Cyberscoop)

21 Touko 202031min

7MS #414: Tales of Pentest Fail #4

7MS #414: Tales of Pentest Fail #4

SafePass.me is the only enterprise solution to protect organizations against credential stuffing and password spraying attacks. Visit safepass.me for more details, and tell them 7 Minute Security sent you to get a 10% discount! Today I'm excited to share more tales of pentest FAIL with you. Today's tales include: Accidentally scanning assets that belong to an agency that nobody should be messing with Delivering reports with vulnerabilities from somebody else's network Why it's important to write a report more than 15 minutes before delivery Lessons learned from firing a disgruntled employee

14 Touko 20201h 4min

7MS #413: PCI Professional Certification (PCIP) - Part 3

7MS #413: PCI Professional Certification (PCIP) - Part 3

Hey everybody! I hope you're hanging in there during quarantine and staying healthy. Today is part 3 of our ongoing series all about becoming a PCIP. The good news is I'm finally, actually registered for the cert and have started diving into the training! So in today's episode I want to regurgitate some of what I'm learning to whet your appetite (or not) for this particular certification. Specifically, we cover: The overview and objectives for being a PCIP (TLDR: PCIP does NOT replace QSA or ISA, but gives us a good understanding of how to protect payment card data) How and why payment card data is leaked/stolen/breached - and then sold/monetized The definition of some fundamental PCI acronym soup, including PCI DSS, PA-DSS and P2PE

7 Touko 202051min

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