7MS #279: Patching Solutions Bake-Off - Part 4

7MS #279: Patching Solutions Bake-Off - Part 4

Intro

The patching solutions review concludes this week with Ivanti's patch solution, as well as PDQ Deploy/Inventory.

As a quick reminder, here's where our bake-off currently sits:

Quick reminder: none of these solutions are bribing me with fat wads of cash to plug their products. Some day I hope to have such problems, but today is not that day.

Ivanti

You might know Ivanti as Shavlik - that's the product name I'm more familiar with anyways. Back in February, Shavlik became Ivanti.

Pros
  • Pretty easy to install and manage - even without a deep background in IT (in today's episode I tell a story that can back this claim based on my experience)

  • Does a solid job of applying patching Windows OS and third party

Cons
  • Pricing is a little steep - last figures I saw were ~$80 per server, per year and ~$40 per workstation, per year.

  • ITScripts library (that allows for GPO-style policy enforcement) is a little slim when compared to similar functionality offered from other solutions

PDQ Deploy/Inventory Pros
  • Lets you crazy with building custom packages you can deploy to granular groups

  • Awesome online help resources, including a YouTube video library that's got a video for just about everything

  • Quick response to support tickets

Cons
  • A bit more complicated to get comfortable with than the other solutions

  • A little confusing on the Windows patching side - not quite as "point and patch" as some of the other solutions

  • Agentless system - machines have to be able to "see" the PDQ

Avsnitt(686)

7MS #269: Documentation

7MS #269: Documentation

Documentation is super boring, right? Yet it's critical to getting your client/audience excited about making their security better! In this episode I talk about my mixed feelings towards the "big" standards like ISO/NIST/etc. and how a more tactical, down-to-earth documentation approach might be more effective in some cases. And I think we need our documentation to be much more focused on consultation/remediation and not just "Hey, your security sucks...and these next 100+ pages will tell you exactly why!" We can do better! Yes, this episode is like 18 minutes because, well, I guess I'm really passionate about documentation. :-)

27 Juli 201713min

7MS #268: IDS on a Budget - Part 3

7MS #268: IDS on a Budget - Part 3

Been having a blast working with the beta branch of the Sweet Security project and it anxious to try the latest fixes of the beta branch. Give it a look! I also spent a lot of time the last few nights playing with Security Onion and love it. After zipping through the install wizard and hitting reboot a few times you're pretty much good to go. A few recommendations I'd make after those initial reboots though: Run the soup command to update Security Onion with all the latest packages Use ufw to adjust the internal firewall to allow management from ports other than SSH (which is already preconfigured) On a side note, I think you might have to have your vnic in VMWare set to promiscuous mode in order to allow proper network sniffing. Do a wget http://testmyids.com to ensure Security Onion alerts are coming in the squil dashboard security alerts are pouring in. Also, check out this article for some handy tips on threat hunting with Bro. Next up on my "test this out list" is to setup DNS tunneling to a Digital Ocean droplet I setup, and see if the onion picks up on that, or if I can at least get warned somehow about a high amount of DNS traffic.

19 Juli 201712min

7MS #267: Backup Disasters

7MS #267: Backup Disasters

Today's episode is a horror story about how I recently lost 5+ years of CrashPlan backups due to what I'm calling a...small clerical error. Yes, this oopsie was 100% my fault, but I think backup providers can do a better job of warning us (via text or automated call rather than just email) before blowing away our life's work.

18 Juli 201711min

7MS #266: IDS on a Budget - Part 2

7MS #266: IDS on a Budget - Part 2

This week I've continued to play with the awesome Sweet Security IDS solution you can throw on a Raspberry Pi 3. A big update to share is that there is a beta branch which has some cool new features, such as the ability to break the Bro + ELK stack across multiple machines. I also lost a lot of sleep these last few days playing with Security Onion and will do a future episode focusing only on that!

13 Juli 201710min

7MS 265: IDS on a Budget - Part 1

7MS 265: IDS on a Budget - Part 1

I've been wanting to get a Bro IDS installed for a long time now - and for several reasons: It looks fun! My customers have expressed interest It will be part of my upcoming ILTACON session. So this weekend I started getting the hardware portion ready, which includes: Ubiquiti Edge Router X (~$99) TP-Link TL-SG105E (~$35) CanaKit Raspberry Pi 3 Complete Starter Kit (~$70) If you need additional information such as screenshots/configs etc to get the VLANs passing properly from the Edge Router X to TP-LINK switch, let me know. Otherwise for now I'm just focusing on crafting content for part 2, where we'll dive into actually turning the Pi into a Bro sensor using Sweet Security.

5 Juli 201710min

7MS #264: Hacking Wordpress

7MS #264: Hacking Wordpress

I was pleasantly surprised to see a Wordpress site fall into a pentest scope this past week. One helpful tool to get familiar with when attacking Wordpress sites is wpscan, which is built right into Kali - or you can grab it from GitHub. Get familiar with the command line flags as they can help you conduct a more gentle scan that recovers from site errors/disconnections more easily. Specifically, read up on these options: --throttle - for example, I've been using --throttle 1000 in order to be a bit less intense on my target site --request-timeout and --connect-timeout help your scan recover smoothly from site errors/timeouts Also, if you find yourself in a situation where you're testing a production Wordpress sight (not recommended), consider setting up a free up/downtime alert via a free service like Uptime Robot so you can get emails if the site ever poops out. That certainly beats hitting F5 in Firefox every 10 seconds :-)

29 Juni 201711min

7MS #263: Make Nessus Reporting Fun Again!

7MS #263: Make Nessus Reporting Fun Again!

Tell me I can't be the only one who regularly wants to combine a bunch of small Nessus scans files into a big fat Nessus scan file, and then make pretty pictures/graphs/summaries that the customer can easily understand? Over the last few weeks I must've tried every Powershell and Python script I could get my hands on, yet still didn't find the magic bullet solution. That is, until I found this little beauty of a tool: NamicSoft. It's a $65 tool for Windows that will not only combine multiple Nessus files into one huge file, but it offers a ton of export/reporting features to make the Nessus data more valuable. Oh, and it can also digest Burp and Nexpose data as well! More on today's episode...

25 Juni 201713min

7MS #262: Speaking at ILTACON

7MS #262: Speaking at ILTACON

Through kind of a weird series of events, I have an opportunity to speak at ILTACON this summer in Vegas (baby!). I'll be talking about some things you can do if you suspect your perimeter is breached, as well as low-hanging fruit you can implement to better defend against breaches. I'm pumped. And I've done the most important part and chosen a PowerPoint theme: A Few Good Men :-) I've spoken with some of you in the past and know a few of you spend your days and sleepless nights hunting threats. If so I'd love to talk to you to get some creative ideas as it relates to crafting the session content.

14 Juni 201710min

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