Book Image

Mastering Active Directory, Third Edition - Third Edition

By : Dishan Francis
5 (2)
Book Image

Mastering Active Directory, Third Edition - Third Edition

5 (2)
By: Dishan Francis

Overview of this book

Mastering Active Directory, Third Edition is a comprehensive guide for Information Technology professionals looking to improve their knowledge about MS Windows Active Directory Domain Service. The book will help you to use identity elements effectively and manage your organization’s infrastructure in a secure and efficient way. This third edition has been fully updated to reflect the importance of cloud-based strong authentication and other tactics to protect identity infrastructure from emerging security threats. Mastering Active Directory, Third Edition provides extensive coverage of AD Domain Services and helps you explore their capabilities as you update to Windows Server 2022. This book will also teach you how to extend on-premises identity presence to cloud via Azure AD hybrid setup. By the end of this Microsoft Active Directory book, you’ll feel confident in your ability to design, plan, deploy, protect, and troubleshoot your enterprise identity infrastructure.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
20
Other Books You May Enjoy
21
Index

Pass-the-hash attacks

If a client needs to authenticate into a server successfully, the client needs to prove their identity. This is done by using a username and password. The client needs to present its username and password to the authentication server, and it will verify the identity. There are legacy protocols and systems that send this information in cleartext, even in an open network. Telnet is a good example of this. If someone is listening to traffic (packet capturing) on a Telnet session, they can easily capture a password as it is transmitted in cleartext.

Modern authentication protocols are well aware of these types of threats and use different technologies to encrypt credentials or create cryptographic hashes for identity verification. Cryptographic hash means a password string is transformed into a fixed-length digest using an algorithm.

Earlier, in the Authentication in an AD environment section, we saw how Kerberos authentication works using hash values. When...