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Microsoft: APT28 hackers exploit Windows flaw reported by NSA
Microsoft: APT28 hackers exploit Windows flaw reported by NSA
Microsoft warns that the Russian APT28 threat group exploits a Windows Print Spooler vulnerability to escalate privileges and steal credentials and data using a previously unknown hacking tool called GooseEgg. #APT28 #Computer #Credential #Escalation #Exploit #GooseEgg #InfoSec #NSA #Print #Privilege #Security #Spooler #Theft #Windows
·bleepingcomputer.com·
Microsoft: APT28 hackers exploit Windows flaw reported by NSA
#NoFilter - Abusing Windows Filtering Platform for Privilege Escalation
#NoFilter - Abusing Windows Filtering Platform for Privilege Escalation
This blog is based on a session we presented at DEF CON 2023 on Sunday, August 13, 2023, in Las Vegas. Privilege escalation is a common attack vector in the Windows OS. There are multiple offensive tools in the wild that can execute code as “NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM” (Meterpreter, CobaltStrike, Potato tools), and they all usually do so by duplicating tokens and manipulating services. This allows them to perform attacks like LSASS Shtinkering.
·deepinstinct.com·
#NoFilter - Abusing Windows Filtering Platform for Privilege Escalation
Certpotato – using adcs to privesc from virtual and network service accounts to local system
Certpotato – using adcs to privesc from virtual and network service accounts to local system
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 way to better remember it. A popular technique for getting SYSTEM from a virtual or network service account is Delegate 2 Thyself by Charlie Clark. This technique involves using RBCD to elevate your privileges. In this article, I propose an alternative approach to become local SYSTEM using ADCS.
·sensepost.com·
Certpotato – using adcs to privesc from virtual and network service accounts to local system
Certpotato – using adcs to privesc from virtual and network service accounts to local system
Certpotato – using adcs to privesc from virtual and network service accounts to local system
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 way to better remember it. A popular technique for getting SYSTEM from a virtual or network service account is Delegate 2 Thyself by Charlie Clark. This technique involves using RBCD to elevate your privileges. In this article, I propose an alternative approach to become local SYSTEM using ADCS.
·sensepost.com·
Certpotato – using adcs to privesc from virtual and network service accounts to local system
Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings). - GitHub - Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
·github.com·
Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings). - GitHub - Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
·github.com·
Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings). - GitHub - Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
·github.com·
Dec0ne/KrbRelayUp: KrbRelayUp - a universal no-fix local privilege escalation in windows domain environments where LDAP signing is not enforced (the default settings).
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
This is the story of CVE-2022-0847, a vulnerability in the Linux kernel since 5.8 which allows overwriting data in arbitrary read-only files. This leads to privilege escalation because unprivileged processes can inject code into root processes. It is similar to CVE-2016-5195 “Dirty Cow” but is easier to exploit. The vulnerability was fixed in Linux 5.16.11, 5.15.25 and 5.10.102.
·dirtypipe.cm4all.com·
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
This is the story of CVE-2022-0847, a vulnerability in the Linux kernel since 5.8 which allows overwriting data in arbitrary read-only files. This leads to privilege escalation because unprivileged processes can inject code into root processes. It is similar to CVE-2016-5195 “Dirty Cow” but is easier to exploit. The vulnerability was fixed in Linux 5.16.11, 5.15.25 and 5.10.102.
·dirtypipe.cm4all.com·
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
This is the story of CVE-2022-0847, a vulnerability in the Linux kernel since 5.8 which allows overwriting data in arbitrary read-only files. This leads to privilege escalation because unprivileged processes can inject code into root processes. It is similar to CVE-2016-5195 “Dirty Cow” but is easier to exploit. The vulnerability was fixed in Linux 5.16.11, 5.15.25 and 5.10.102.
·dirtypipe.cm4all.com·
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
This is the story of CVE-2022-0847, a vulnerability in the Linux kernel since 5.8 which allows overwriting data in arbitrary read-only files. This leads to privilege escalation because unprivileged processes can inject code into root processes. It is similar to CVE-2016-5195 “Dirty Cow” but is easier to exploit. The vulnerability was fixed in Linux 5.16.11, 5.15.25 and 5.10.102.
·dirtypipe.cm4all.com·
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
This is the story of CVE-2022-0847, a vulnerability in the Linux kernel since 5.8 which allows overwriting data in arbitrary read-only files. This leads to privilege escalation because unprivileged processes can inject code into root processes. It is similar to CVE-2016-5195 “Dirty Cow” but is easier to exploit. The vulnerability was fixed in Linux 5.16.11, 5.15.25 and 5.10.102.
·dirtypipe.cm4all.com·
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
This is the story of CVE-2022-0847, a vulnerability in the Linux kernel since 5.8 which allows overwriting data in arbitrary read-only files. This leads to privilege escalation because unprivileged processes can inject code into root processes. It is similar to CVE-2016-5195 “Dirty Cow” but is easier to exploit. The vulnerability was fixed in Linux 5.16.11, 5.15.25 and 5.10.102.
·dirtypipe.cm4all.com·
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
This is the story of CVE-2022-0847, a vulnerability in the Linux kernel since 5.8 which allows overwriting data in arbitrary read-only files. This leads to privilege escalation because unprivileged processes can inject code into root processes. It is similar to CVE-2016-5195 “Dirty Cow” but is easier to exploit. The vulnerability was fixed in Linux 5.16.11, 5.15.25 and 5.10.102.
·dirtypipe.cm4all.com·
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
This is the story of CVE-2022-0847, a vulnerability in the Linux kernel since 5.8 which allows overwriting data in arbitrary read-only files. This leads to privilege escalation because unprivileged processes can inject code into root processes. It is similar to CVE-2016-5195 “Dirty Cow” but is easier to exploit. The vulnerability was fixed in Linux 5.16.11, 5.15.25 and 5.10.102.
·dirtypipe.cm4all.com·
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
This is the story of CVE-2022-0847, a vulnerability in the Linux kernel since 5.8 which allows overwriting data in arbitrary read-only files. This leads to privilege escalation because unprivileged processes can inject code into root processes. It is similar to CVE-2016-5195 “Dirty Cow” but is easier to exploit. The vulnerability was fixed in Linux 5.16.11, 5.15.25 and 5.10.102.
·dirtypipe.cm4all.com·
The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability — The Dirty Pipe Vulnerability documentation
Escaping privileged containers for fun
Escaping privileged containers for fun
Despite the fact that it is not a 'real' vulnerability, escaping privileged Docker containers is nevertheless pretty funny. And because there will always be people who will come up with reasons or excuses to run a privileged container (even though you really shouldn't), this could really be handy at some point in the future
·pwning.systems·
Escaping privileged containers for fun
Escaping privileged containers for fun
Escaping privileged containers for fun
Despite the fact that it is not a 'real' vulnerability, escaping privileged Docker containers is nevertheless pretty funny. And because there will always be people who will come up with reasons or excuses to run a privileged container (even though you really shouldn't), this could really be handy at some point in the future
·pwning.systems·
Escaping privileged containers for fun
Escaping privileged containers for fun
Escaping privileged containers for fun
Despite the fact that it is not a 'real' vulnerability, escaping privileged Docker containers is nevertheless pretty funny. And because there will always be people who will come up with reasons or excuses to run a privileged container (even though you really shouldn't), this could really be handy at some point in the future
·pwning.systems·
Escaping privileged containers for fun
New Linux Vulnerability CVE-2022-0492 Affecting Cgroups: Can Containers Escape?
New Linux Vulnerability CVE-2022-0492 Affecting Cgroups: Can Containers Escape?
On Feb. 4, Linux announced CVE-2022-0492, a new privilege escalation vulnerability in the kernel. CVE-2022-0492 marks a logical bug in control groups (cgroups), a Linux feature that is a fundamental building block of containers. The issue stands out as one of the simplest Linux privilege escalations discovered in recent times: The Linux kernel mistakenly exposed a privileged operation to unprivileged users.
·unit42.paloaltonetworks.com·
New Linux Vulnerability CVE-2022-0492 Affecting Cgroups: Can Containers Escape?
New Linux Vulnerability CVE-2022-0492 Affecting Cgroups: Can Containers Escape?
New Linux Vulnerability CVE-2022-0492 Affecting Cgroups: Can Containers Escape?
On Feb. 4, Linux announced CVE-2022-0492, a new privilege escalation vulnerability in the kernel. CVE-2022-0492 marks a logical bug in control groups (cgroups), a Linux feature that is a fundamental building block of containers. The issue stands out as one of the simplest Linux privilege escalations discovered in recent times: The Linux kernel mistakenly exposed a privileged operation to unprivileged users.
·unit42.paloaltonetworks.com·
New Linux Vulnerability CVE-2022-0492 Affecting Cgroups: Can Containers Escape?
New Linux Vulnerability CVE-2022-0492 Affecting Cgroups: Can Containers Escape?
New Linux Vulnerability CVE-2022-0492 Affecting Cgroups: Can Containers Escape?
On Feb. 4, Linux announced CVE-2022-0492, a new privilege escalation vulnerability in the kernel. CVE-2022-0492 marks a logical bug in control groups (cgroups), a Linux feature that is a fundamental building block of containers. The issue stands out as one of the simplest Linux privilege escalations discovered in recent times: The Linux kernel mistakenly exposed a privileged operation to unprivileged users.
·unit42.paloaltonetworks.com·
New Linux Vulnerability CVE-2022-0492 Affecting Cgroups: Can Containers Escape?