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Incident Response for Windows

You're reading from   Incident Response for Windows Adapt effective strategies for managing sophisticated cyberattacks targeting Windows systems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804619322
Length 244 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Anatoly Tykushin Anatoly Tykushin
Author Profile Icon Anatoly Tykushin
Anatoly Tykushin
Svetlana Ostrovskaya Svetlana Ostrovskaya
Author Profile Icon Svetlana Ostrovskaya
Svetlana Ostrovskaya
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Understanding the Threat Landscape and Attack Life Cycle
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to the Threat Landscape FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Understanding the Attack Life Cycle 4. Part 2: Incident Response Procedures and Endpoint Forensic Evidence Collection
5. Chapter 3: Phases of an Efficient Incident Response on Windows Infrastructure 6. Chapter 4: Endpoint Forensic Evidence Collection 7. Part 3: Incident Analysis and Threat Hunting on Windows Systems
8. Chapter 5: Gaining Access to the Network 9. Chapter 6: Establishing a Foothold 10. Chapter 7: Network and Key Assets Discovery 11. Chapter 8: Network Propagation 12. Chapter 9: Data Collection and Exfiltration 13. Chapter 10: Impact 14. Chapter 11: Threat Hunting and Analysis of TTPs 15. Part 4: Incident Investigation Management and Reporting
16. Chapter 12: Incident Containment, Eradication, and Recovery 17. Chapter 13: Incident Investigation Closure and Reporting 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Methods of post-exploitation

Post-exploitation is a crucial step in the attack process. It occurs when an adversary has successfully gained access to the target system and wishes to maintain access, escalate privileges, or gather necessary information. This involves performing actions to bypass detection and maintain persistence, enabling threat actors to continue their activities on the system and the victim’s infrastructure.

There are various techniques that can be applied by threat actors to reach their goals at this stage. Boot or Logon Autostart Execution (T1547) and Initialization Scripts (T1037), Event Triggered Execution (T1546), Scheduled Task/Job (T1053), or Valid Accounts (T1078) might be used to get persistence or escalate privileges. In many cases, in the initial stages of attack, such actions can be performed automatically. Abuse Elevation Control Mechanism (T1548), Domain or Tenant Policy Modification (T1484), Hijack Execution Flow (T1574), and Process Injection...

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