7MS #365: Interview with Ryan Manship and Dave Dobrotka - Part 3

7MS #365: Interview with Ryan Manship and Dave Dobrotka - Part 3

This episode of the 7 Minute Security Podcast is brought to you by Authentic8, creators of Silo. Silo allows its users to conduct online investigations to collect information off the web securely and anonymously. For more information, check out Authentic8.

First, a bit of miscellany:

  • If you replace "red rain" with "red team" in this song, we might just have a red team anthem on our hands!

  • If you're in the Twin Cities area and looking for an infosec analyst job, check out this posting with UBB. If interested, I can help make an electronic introduction - and/or let 'em know 7 Minute Security sent ya!

Ok, in today's program we're talking about red teaming again with our third awesome installment with Ryan and Dave who are professional red teamers! Today we cover:

  • Recon - it's super important! It's like putting together puzzle pieces...and the more of that puzzle you can figure out, less likely you'll be surprised and the more likely you'll succeed at your objective!

  • Reporting - how do you deliver reports in a way that blue team doesn't feel picked on, management understands the risk, and ultimately everybody leaves feeling charged to secure all the things?

I also asked the questions folks submitted to me via LinkedIn/Slack:

  • Any tips for the most dreaded part of an assessment (reports)?

  • How do you get around PowerShell v5 with restrict language mode without having the ability to downgrade to v2?

  • What's an alternative to PowerShell tooling for internal pentesting? (hint: C# is the hotness)

  • What certs/skills should I pursue to get better at red teaming (outside of "Hey, go build a lab!").

  • Are customers happy to get assessed by a red team exercise, or do they do it begrudgingly because of requirements/regulations?

Avsnitt(689)

7MS #618: Writing Savage Pentest Reports with Sysreptor

7MS #618: Writing Savage Pentest Reports with Sysreptor

Today’s episode is all about writing reports in Sysreptor.  It’s awesome!  Main takeaways: The price is free (they have a paid version as well)! You can send findings and artifacts directly to the report server using the reptor Python module Warning: Sysreptor only exports to PDF (no Word version option!) Sysreptor has helped us write reports faster without sacrificing quality

5 Apr 202438min

7MS #617: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 55

7MS #617: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 55

Hey friends, today we’ve got a tale of pentest pwnage that covers: Passwords – make sure to look for patterns such as keyboard walks, as well as people who are picking passwords where the month the password changed is part of the password (say that five times fast)! Making sure you go after cached credentials Attacking SCCM – Misconfiguration Manager is an absolute gem to read, and The First Cred is the Deepest – Part 2 with Gabriel Prud’homme is an absolute gem to see.  Also, check out sccmhunter for all your SCCM pwnage needs.

29 Mars 202436min

7MS #616: Interview with Andrew Morris of GreyNoise

7MS #616: Interview with Andrew Morris of GreyNoise

Hey friends, today we have a super fun interview with Andrew Morris of GreyNoise to share.  Andrew chatted with us about: Young Andrew’s early adventures in hacking his school’s infrastructure (note: don’t try this at home, kids!) Meeting a pentester for the first time, and getting his first pentesting job Spinning up a box on the internet, having it get popped instantly, and wondering…”Are all these people trying to hack me?” Battling through a pentester’s least favorite part of the job: THE REPORT! GreyNoise’s origin story How to build a better honeypot/honeynet

22 Mars 202459min

7MS #615: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 54

7MS #615: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 54

Hey friends, sorry I’m so late with this (er, last) week’s episode but I’m back!  Today is more of a prep for tales of pentest pwnage, but topics covered include: Make sure when you’re snafflin‘ that you check for encrypted/obfuscated logins and login strings – it might not be too tough to decrypt them! On the defensive side, I’ve found myself getting *blocked* doing things like SharpHound runs, Snaffler, PowerHuntShares, etc.  Look through the readme files for these tools and try cranking down the intensity/threads of these tools and you might fly under the radar.

19 Mars 202421min

7MS #614: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Crying - Part 16

7MS #614: How to Succeed in Business Without Really Crying - Part 16

How much fun I had attending and speaking at Netwrix Connect Being a sales guy in conference situations without being an annoying sales guy in conference situations A recap of the talk I co-presented about high profile breaches and lessons we can learn from them

8 Mars 202436min

7MS #613: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 53

7MS #613: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 53

Today’s tale of pentest covers: Farming for credentials (don’t forget to understand trusted zones to make this happen properly!) Snaffling for juice file shares Stealing Kerberos tickets with Rubeus

1 Mars 202433min

7MS #612: Pentestatonix - Part 2

7MS #612: Pentestatonix - Part 2

Hello friends, we’re still deep in the podcast trenches this quarter and wanted to share some nuggets of cool stuff we’ve been learning along the way: Snaffler – pairs nicely with PowerHuntShares to find juicy tidbits within file/folder shares Group3r – helps you find interesting and potentially abusable Group Policy Object configurations Farmer – totally awesome toolkit for dropping tricky files on shares that will do things like fire up the Webclient service for any system browsing the share (doesn’t require admin rights!) or coaxing a system into authenticating with you via HTTP or SMB

25 Feb 202432min

7MS #611: Pentestatonix

7MS #611: Pentestatonix

Hey friends, sorry for the late episode but I've been deep in the trenches of pentest adventures.  I'll do a more formal tale of pentest pwnage when I come up for air, but for now I wanted to share some tips I've picked up from recent engagements: GraphRunner - awesome PowerShell toolkit for interacting with Microsoft Graph API.  From a pentesting perspective, it may help you bridge the "gap" between LAN-side AD and Azure and find some goodies - like files with and XSLX extension containing the word password. PowerUpSQL -I typically use this to make SQL servers cough me up a hash via SMB using stored procedures, but I learned this week that I'll deeeefffffinitely use the Invoke-SQLAudit -Verbose functionality going forward.

19 Feb 202434min

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