7MS #432: Tales of Internal Network Pentest Pwnage - Part 21
7 Minute Security16 Syys 2020

7MS #432: Tales of Internal Network Pentest Pwnage - Part 21

Yay! It's time for another tale of pentest pwnage! Highlights include:

  • Making sure you take multiple rounds of "dumps" to get all the delicious local admin creds.

  • Why lsassy is my new best friend.

  • I gave a try to using a Ubuntu box instead of Kali as my attacking system for this test. I had pretty good results. Here's my script to quickly give Ubuntu a Kali-like flair:

sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get upgrade -y sudo apt-get install openssh-server -y sudo apt-get install nmap curl dnsrecon git net-tools open-vm-tools-desktop python3.8 python3-pip unzip wget xsltproc -y #Aha helps take output from testssl.sh and make it nice and HTML-y sudo git clone https://github.com/theZiz/aha.git /opt/aha #Awesome-nmap-grep makes it easy to grep nmap exports for just the data you need! sudo git clone https://github.com/leonjza/awesome-nmap-grep.git /opt/awesome-nmap-grep #bpatty is...well...bpatty! sudo git clone https://github.com/braimee/bpatty.git /opt/bpatty #CrackMapExec is...awesome sudo mkdir /opt/cme cd /opt/cme sudo curl https://github.com/byt3bl33d3r/CrackMapExec/releases/download/v5.1.0dev/cme-ubuntu-latest.1.zip -L -o cme.zip sudo unzip cme.zip sudo chmod +x ./cme #eyewitness is a nice recon tool for putting some great visualization behind nmap scans sudo git clone https://github.com/FortyNorthSecurity/EyeWitness.git /opt/eyewitness cd /opt/eyewitness/Python/setup sudo ./setup.sh #impacket is "a collection of Python classes for working with network protocols" #I currently primarily use it for ntlmrelayx.py sudo git clone https://github.com/CoreSecurity/impacket.git /opt/impacket cd /opt/impacket sudo pip3 install . #mitm6 is a way to tinker with ip6 and get around some ip4-level protections sudo git clone https://github.com/fox-it/mitm6.git /opt/mitm6 cd /opt/mitm6 sudo pip3 install -r requirements.txt # install service-identity sudo pip3 install service-identity # lsassy sudo python3 -m pip install lsassy #nmap-bootstrap-xsl turns nmap scan output into pretty HTML sudo git clone https://github.com/honze-net/nmap-bootstrap-xsl.git /opt/nmap-bootstrap-xsl #netcreds "Sniffs sensitive data from interface or pcap" sudo git clone https://github.com/DanMcInerney/net-creds /opt/netcreds #PCCredz parses pcaps for sensitive data sudo git clone https://github.com/lgandx/PCredz /opt/pcredz #Powersploit is "a collection of Microsoft PowerShell modules that can be used to aid penetration testers during all phases of an assessment" sudo git clone https://github.com/PowerShellMafia/PowerSploit.git /opt/powersploit #PowerupSQL is a tool for discovering, enumerating and potentially pwning SQL servers! sudo git clone https://github.com/NetSPI/PowerUpSQL.git /opt/powerupsql #responder is awesome for LLMNR, NBT-NS and MDNS poisoning sudo git clone https://github.com/lgandx/Responder.git /opt/responder

Jaksot(705)

7MS #520: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Crying - Part 11

7MS #520: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Crying - Part 11

Hey friends, today we're giving another peek behind the curtain of what it's like to run a cybersecurity consultancy. Topics include: Setting the right communication cadence - and communication channels - with a customer during a pentest. Tips for collaborating well with contractors so that the customer experience feels like "a single human pane of glass" (insert barf emoji here). How we're using Intercom to publish self-help/FAQ articles for 7MS.

13 Touko 202248min

7MS #519: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 35

7MS #519: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 35

Hey friends, it's another fun tale of pentest pwnage today! This one talks about cool things you can do when you have full rights over an OU in Active Directory. Important links to review: BloodHound edges DACL Trouble: Generic All on OUs AD prep bug in Windows Server 2016

7 Touko 202246min

7MS #518: Interview with Amanda Berlin of Blumira

7MS #518: Interview with Amanda Berlin of Blumira

Today we're pumped to share a featured interview with Amanda Berlin, Lead Incident Detection Engineer at Blumira. You might already be familiar with Amanda's awesome Defensive Security Handbook or fine work with Mental Health Hackers. We polled our Slack friends and structured this interview as an AAA (Ask Amanda Anything). That resulted in a really fun chat that covered many things technical and not technical! Questions we posed to Amanda include: Can you tell us more about your infosec superhero origin story and creation of your book? Will there ever be a new version of the Defensive Security Handbook? What blue team certs/YouTube vids/classes/conferences give the best bang for your buck? Was it a mistake to invent computers? From a logging standpoint, what devices provide blind spots (Linux systems, ioT devices, etc.)? You can wave a magic wand and solve any three security challenges instantly - what do you choose? Infosec Twitter drama. Love it? Leave it? Something inbetween? Tips to prevent business email compromise? How do we keep beloved family/friends (who keep falling prey to social engineering campaigns) safer on their computers and on the Web? Our company had a partial ransomware deployment a few years ago. Is changing Active Directory passwords changed and formatting affected systems enough? (Spoiler alert: no. See Microsoft's advice on the topic)

27 Huhti 202257min

7MS #517: DIY Pentest Dropbox Tips - Part 6

7MS #517: DIY Pentest Dropbox Tips - Part 6

Today we're continuing a series we haven't done in a while (click here to see the whole series) all about building and deploying pentest dropboxes for customers. Specifically, we cover: Auto installing Splashtop This can be done automatically by downloading your splashtop.exe install and issuing this command: splashtop.exe prevercheck /s /i confirm_d=0,hidewindow=1,notray=0,req_perm=0,sec_opt=2 Auto installing Ninite This can be done in a batch script like so: agent.msi /quiet ninitepro.exe /select App1 App2 App3 /silent ninite-install-report.txt The above command installs App1, App2 and App3 silently and logs output to a file called ninite-install-report.txt Auto installing Uptimerobot monitoring We do this by first creating a script called c:\uptimerobot.ps1 that makes the "phone home" call to UptimeRobot: Start-Transcript -Path c:\heartbeat.log -Append Invoke-Webrequest https://heartbeat.uptimerobot.com/LONG-UNIQUE-STRING -UseBasicParsing Stop-Transcript Then we install the scheduled task itself like so: schtasks.exe /create /tn "Heartbeat" /tr "powershell -noprofile -executionpolicy bypass -file c:\uptimerobot.ps1" /rl highest /f /sc minute /mo 5 /ru "NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM"

22 Huhti 202246min

7MS #516: Tips to Travel More Securely

7MS #516: Tips to Travel More Securely

In today's episode I talk about a cool self-defense class I took a while ago which was all about less lethal methods of protecting/defending yourself. I also talk about some safer ways to handle/hide cash while traveling on vacation.

14 Huhti 202245min

7MS #515: Securing Your Family During and After a Disaster - Part 5

7MS #515: Securing Your Family During and After a Disaster - Part 5

Today we continue the series we started a few years ago called Security Your Family During and After a Disaster (the last part in this series was from a few years ago. In today's episode we focus on some additional things you should be thinking about to strengthen the "in case of emergency" document you share with your close friends and family.

6 Huhti 202235min

7MS #514: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 34

7MS #514: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 34

Welcome to another fun tale of pentest pwnage! This one isn't a telling of one single pentest, but a collection of helpful tips and tricks I've been using on a bunch of different tests lately. These tips include: I'm seeing nmap scans get flagged a bit more from managed SOC services. Maybe a "quieter" nmap scan will help get enough ports to do a WitnessMe run, but still fly under the logging/alerting radar? Something like: nmap -p80,443,8000,8080 subnet.i.wanna.scan/24 -oA outputfile Using mitm6 in "sniper" mode by targeting just one host with: mitm6 victim-I-want-to-get-juicy-info-from -d victim.domain --ignore-nofqnd Using secretsdump to target a single host: secretsdump.py -target-ip 1.2.3.4 localadmin:@1.2.3.4 -hashes THIS-IS-WHERE-THE:SAM-HASHES-GO. Note the colon after localadmin - it's intentional, NOT an error! Rubeus makes password spraying easy-peasy! Rubeus.exe spray /password:Winter2022 /outfile:output.txt. Get some hits from that effort? Then spray the good password against ALL domain accounts and you might get even more gold! LDAPs relaying not working? Make sure it's config'd right: nmap -p636 -sV -iL txt-file-with-dcs-in-it

30 Maalis 202250min

7MS #513: Interview with Christopher Fielder and Jon Crotty of Arctic Wolf

7MS #513: Interview with Christopher Fielder and Jon Crotty of Arctic Wolf

Today we're joined by our friends Christopher Fielder and Jon Crotty from Arctic Wolf to talk about their interesting report on The State of Cybersecurity: 2022 Trends (note: you can get some of the report's key points here without needing to provide an email address). The three of us dig in to talk about some of the report's specific highlights, including: Many orgs are running the bare minimum (or nothing!) for endpoint protection Cyber insurance costs are going up, and some customers are unable to afford it - or they're getting dropped by their carrier altogether Security is still not getting a seat at the decision-making table in a lot of orgs, and already-overburned IT teams taking on security as part of their job descriptions as well Seems like everybody and their mom is moving infrastructure to the cloud, but few are managing that attack surface, thus increasing risk The cyber skills gap remains a challenge - many security gurus are looking to get out of their current position, leading many orgs to hire inexperienced teams who make rushed/misinformed decisions about security tools and services, thus making the org less secure P.S. this is Christopher's fifth time on the program. Be sure to check out his first, second, third and fourth interviews with 7MS.

23 Maalis 202255min

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