Windows named pipes, being one of many available mechanisms for inter-component / inter-process communications, is interesting from a security perspective. While hunting for vulnerabilities in various bits of software, I often see the pattern of a privileged process that exposes a named pipe such that a client process can interact with it. More often than not, you’ll eventually be curious enough to want to snoop on the data that is…
Abuse of Active Directory Certificate Services (AD CS) has become a staple of our internal network assessment methodology. In fact, I can’t recall an internal I’ve done in the past two or more years that didn’t feature ADCS abuse in some manner or another. We can all agree that when AD CS abuse works as intended, it is fantastic. As Tinus Green stated in his BSides talk, AD CS abuse…
While doing an internal assessment, I was able to compromise multiple computers and servers but wasn’t able to dump the LSA secrets because of a particular EDR being installed and pretty aggressive against me. In this blog post we’ll see how this EDR was blocking me and why it is still possible to dump these secrets exploiting decorrelation attacks! As a bonus, I’ll show you a fancy way of retrieving…
If you have been doing internal assessments on Active Directory infrastructure you may have heard the following words: “Null session”, “Guest session” and “Anonymous session”. These words describe techniques that can be used on Windows servers to connect to resources and obtain information about a computer or Active Directory objects such as users or SMB shares you have access on. Even if these techniques are well known I realised that…
TL;DR I wanted to better understand EDR’s so I built a dummy EDR and talk about it here. EDR (Endpoint Detection and Response) is a kind of security product that aims to detect abnormal activities being executed on a computer or a server. When looking for resources about how EDR’s work, I realised that, even if there is a lot of literature available about EDR’s, there aren’t many articles explaining…
For our annual internal hacker conference dubbed SenseCon in 2023, I decided to take a look at communication between a Windows driver and its user-mode process. Here are some details about that journey. Attackers could use Windows kernel R/W exploit primitive to avoid communication between EDR_Driver.sys and its EDR_process.exe. As a result some EDR detection mechanisms will be disabled and make it (partially) blind to malicious payloads. This blogpost describes…
On the 31st of October 2022, a PR on CrackMapExec from Thomas Seigneuret (@Zblurx) was merged. This PR fixed Kerberos authentication in the CrackMapExec framework. Seeing that, I instantly wanted to try it out and play a bit with it. While doing so I discovered a weird behaviour with the Protected Users group. In this blogpost I’ll explain what the Protected Users group is, why it is a nice security…
The goal of this blog post is to present a privilege escalation I found while working on ADCS. We will see how it is possible to elevate our privileges to NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM from virtual and network service accounts of a domain-joined machine (for example from a webshell on a Windows server) using ADCS. I want to call this attack chain “CertPotato” as homage to other *Potato tools and as a…
During an internal assessment, I performed an NTLM relay and ended up owning the NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM account of the Windows server. Looking at the users connected on the same server, I knew that a domain administrator account was connected. All I had to do to compromise the domain, was compromise the account. This could be achieved by dumping the memory of the LSASS process and collecting their credentials or Kerberos…
I built some infrastructure that you could deploy and use to easily tunnel from arbitrary sources over a proxy such as SOCKS, using anything that can run WireGuard. This is convenient in cases where it would be nicer to have a full network route to a target network (with working DNS) vs just having application specific proxy rules. In this post I’ll elaborate a bit on that idea. If you…