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Pentesting Active Directory and Windows-based Infrastructure

You're reading from   Pentesting Active Directory and Windows-based Infrastructure A comprehensive practical guide to penetration testing Microsoft infrastructure

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804611364
Length 360 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Denis Isakov Denis Isakov
Author Profile Icon Denis Isakov
Denis Isakov
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Getting the Lab Ready and Attacking Exchange Server 2. Chapter 2: Defense Evasion FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Domain Reconnaissance and Discovery 4. Chapter 4: Credential Access in Domain 5. Chapter 5: Lateral Movement in Domain and Across Forests 6. Chapter 6: Domain Privilege Escalation 7. Chapter 7: Persistence on Domain Level 8. Chapter 8: Abusing Active Directory Certificate Services 9. Chapter 9: Compromising Microsoft SQL Server 10. Chapter 10: Taking Over WSUS and SCCM 11. Index 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

Domain privilege escalation

In this section, we will explore practical techniques to escalate privileges by exploiting various security issues, such as template and extension misconfigurations (ESC1, 2, 3, 9, and 10), improper access controls (ESC4, 5, and 7), CA misconfiguration (ESC6), and relay attacks (ESC8 and 11). I have chosen such a grouping of the attacks from[12]. But to begin with, we will start with a critical vulnerability discovered by Oliver Lyak, called Certifried, which evolves into ESC9 and ESC10 after the patch.

Certifried (CVE-2022-26923)

This vulnerability has much in common with samAccountName spoofing (CVE-2021-42278). Original research by the author is published here[13].

In AD CS, by default, there are two authentication certificates: user and machine. Every user account has a User Principal Name (UPN) that must be unique. The UPN is embedded into the certificate and used by KDC during authentication. Computer accounts do not have a UPN, as dNSHostName...

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