Bug Bytes #26 – File upload to SQLi, Google’s CTF & Data Breach 101
By Intigriti
July 9, 2019
Bug Bytes is a weekly newsletter curated by members of the bug bounty community. The first series are curated by Mariem, better known as PentesterLand. Every week, she keeps us updated with a comprehensive list of all write-ups, tools, tutorials and resources we should not have missed.
Hey hackers! These are our favorite resources shared by pentesters and bug hunters last week.
This issue covers the week from 28 of June to 05 of July.
Intigriti news
We partnered up with PwnFunction to create a writeup video on Google’s 2019 CTF.
We’ll be releasing more content soon, so make sure to subscribe to our channel!
Very excited to announce that we've partnered up with @PwnFunction to create snackable video content for security researchers! 🤓
Check out our first video on how to solve @Google's CTF here 👇#HackWithIntigritihttps://t.co/JO3ONBQZl7— Intigriti (@intigriti) July 8, 2019
Our favorite 5 hacking items
1. Webinar of the week
Intro to Cloud for Pentesters and Bug hunters | Security and Research Company (SECARMY)
This is an excellent introduction to cloud security for pentesters and bug hunters. If you’ve ever felt intimidated by AWS testing, this is a perfect opportunity to tackle this topic.
You’ll learn about cloud computing, the difference between IaaS, PaaS and SaaS, common misconfigurations of four components of AWS (including AWS S3 and IAM) with examples and links to writeups.
2. Writeup of the week
I’ve never thought that the file name specified during a file upload could be saved to a database, and so potentially vulnerable to SQL injection!
It seems like an unusual entry point for this kind of attacks. So it’s good to know and add to one’s list of locations to fuzz for SQL injection.
3. Conference of the week
Pass the SALT 2019 videos & all slides, especially:
– Hacking Jenkins & Slides
– Time-efficient assessment of open-source projects for Red Teamers & Slides
– Better curl ! & Slides
– Dexcalibur – automate your android app reverse & Slides
– Mini-Internet using LXC (MI-LXC): A first step towards a free CyberRange ? & Slides
– JWAT… Attacking JSON Web Tokens & Slides
– KILL MD5 – Demystifying hash collisions & Slides
When I first saw the name of this conference, I thought it was only about passwords, hashes and crypto (because of the word “SALT”).
But it’s actually very eclectic with talks on interesting offensive security topics like: reversing Android apps, why MD5 is so weak, JSON Web tokens, Curl, red teaming & open source, Jenkins security, etc.
And with brilliant speakers like Orange Tsai and Louis Nyffenegger, I’m sure quality is there too.
4. Tool of the week
Asset Discover is a Burp Suite extension that passively collects asset-related information. While you’re browsing the target app, it parses responses and extracts the following assets: domains, subdomains, IP addresses, S3 buckets, DigitalOcean space URLs and Azure Blob URLs.
Having this kind of information passively gathered and easily accessible is interesting. It’s worth testing.
5. Article of the week
Data Breaches are on the Rise — Is it too hard to p̶r̶e̶v̶e̶n̶t̶ control data breaches?
Being obsessed with offensive security, defense is not my forte. But it’s interesting to consider both to be able to understand the other side (developers, clients, bug bounty programs…) and, if necessary, advise them on how to remedy bugs or up their security.
This article provides multiple practices that can help avoid breaches, with links to resources (tools, checklists, people to follow, articles, etc).
It’s good to know for both hackers and defenders.
Other amazing things we stumbled upon this week
Videos
Let’s Learn Rust 🙂 by d0nutptr
Podcasts
Chats On The Road To Hacker Summer Camp 2019 | DEF CON 27 | A Conversation With Jeff Moss
Episode 530 – Why You Should Not Pay The Ransom From Ransomware
Security In Five – Episode 528 – Things To Thnk About Before Using A Password Manager
Business Security Weekly #134 – Mastercard, Gen Z, & Leadership
Webinars & Webcasts
OWASP WIA + InfoSecGirls knowledge exchange webinars: August 2018, October 2018, December 2018, January 2019, February 2019, March 2019, April 2019,
Conferences
Captain Marvelous JavaScript – A look at the versality of JavaScript and how hackers use it
BSidesPGH Black 2019, especially:
Slides only
Tutorials
Medium to advanced
How do I automate the enviroment setup for android pentesting using simple bash scripts
Testing SAML Endpoints for XML Signature Wrapping Vulnerabilities
Eternalrelayx.py — Non-Admin NTLM Relaying & ETERNALBLUE Exploitation
Ninja Turtles in your network: LAN Turtle 3G. A how-to for red teaming
Use Microsoft.com Domains to Bypass Firewalls & Execute Payloads
Beginners corner
Writeups
Challenge writeups
Pwning OWASP Juice Shop (Free e-book) & Online version
CloudGoat 2 Walkthrough – Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four & Part Five
Pentest writeups
Discovering and Exploiting API Attack Surface Using Client-Side Javascript
Red Team Techniques: Gaining access on an external engagement through spear-phishing
How I Hacked Into Your Corporate Network Using Your Own Antivirus Agent
Black Team War Stories: Which company are you a contractor with?
Responsible(ish) disclosure writeups
Bug bounty writeups
SSTI ($1,200)
Improper access control on GitLab & TL;DR ($7,000)
See more writeups on The list of bug bounty writeups.
Tools
If you don’t have time
FridaLoader: A quick and dirty app to download & launch Frida x86 on Genymotion. Useful during Android engagements when you don’t want to download & run the @fridadotre Server on the device every time
iframeBusterXSS: Tool for identifying iFrameBuster files (which often contain easy XSS)
More tools, if you have time
CollabOzark: A simple tool which helps the researchers track SSRF, RCE, Blind XSS, XXE, External Resource Access payloads triggers
Slothy: Open source information gathering tool from publicly available sites against a target domain
CRLF-Injection-Scanner: Command line tool for testing CRLF injection on list of domains
Recon: Easy Fast recon script
Hershell: Multiplatform reverse shell generator
Misc. pentest & bug bounty resources
Bug Bounty Methodology (TTP- Tactics,Techniques and Procedures) V 2.0
Useful Commands by @LearnerPentest
Richelieu: List of the most common French passwords
Security/Server Side TLS & TL;DR: Changes in Mozilla’s TLS server configuration guide for the first time in 2.5 years
Ipless-scan.py & Introduction: Perform a port scan without having an IP configured on your network interface
Challenges
Articles
Using the ‘screen’ utility to run recon tools while you are asleep! 😴
How to not be a script kiddie:Stop the Metasploit Over-reliance! Part 1
News
Bug bounty news
FastFoodHackings: zseano’s live hands on live mentoring session
5798! This is the impressive number of bugs discovered by @todayisnew while bug hunting
$2, that’s the bounty @evanricafort got for a critical IDOR!
Vulnerabilities
17-Year-Old Weakness in Firefox Let HTML File Steal Other Files From Device
Microsoft Teams Can Be Used to Download and Run Malicious Packages
OpenID Foundation says ‘Sign In with Apple’ is not secure enough
Breaches & Attacks
Mac Malware Pushed via Google Search Results, Masquerades as Flash Installer
Inside the West’s failed fight against China’s ‘Cloud Hopper’ hackers
First malware to abuse DNS over HTTPS poses challenge for defenders
Malicious apps/sites
Other news
A Plan to Stop Breaches With Dead Simple Database Encryption
China Is Forcing Tourists to Install Text-Stealing Malware at its Border
Non technical
Tweeted this week
We created a collection of our favorite pentest & bug bounty related tweets shared this past week. You’re welcome to read them directly on Twitter: Tweets from 06/28/2019 to 07/05/2019.
Disclaimer:
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the curators and do not necessarily reflect the position of intigriti.Curated by Pentester Land &Sponsored by Intigriti
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