Book Image

Windows APT Warfare

By : Sheng-Hao Ma
5 (2)
Book Image

Windows APT Warfare

5 (2)
By: Sheng-Hao Ma

Overview of this book

An Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) is a severe form of cyberattack that lies low in the system for a prolonged time and locates and then exploits sensitive information. Preventing APTs requires a strong foundation of basic security techniques combined with effective security monitoring. This book will help you gain a red team perspective on exploiting system design and master techniques to prevent APT attacks. Once you’ve understood the internal design of operating systems, you’ll be ready to get hands-on with red team attacks and, further, learn how to create and compile C source code into an EXE program file. Throughout this book, you’ll explore the inner workings of how Windows systems run and how attackers abuse this knowledge to bypass antivirus products and protection. As you advance, you’ll cover practical examples of malware and online game hacking, such as EXE infection, shellcode development, software packers, UAC bypass, path parser vulnerabilities, and digital signature forgery, gaining expertise in keeping your system safe from this kind of malware. By the end of this book, you’ll be well equipped to implement the red team techniques that you've learned on a victim's computer environment, attempting to bypass security and antivirus products, to test its defense against Windows APT attacks.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Part 1 – Modern Windows Compiler
5
Part 2 – Windows Process Internals
9
Part 3 – Abuse System Design and Red Team Tips

Index

As this ebook edition doesn't have fixed pagination, the page numbers below are hyperlinked for reference only, based on the printed edition of this book.

A

access control entries (ACEs) 210

Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR) 10, 101

Anti-debugger/attach 126

Anti-tamper protection 126

Anti-virtual machine 126

API CRC table 113

application binary interface (ABI) 5

application loader 10

Argument Passing and Naming Conventions

reference link 44

assembler

assembly code, transforming into machine code 7

Authenticode digital signatures 146, 147, 152

reference link 146

Auto Elevation privilege 190

B

benignware 95

binary data

packing, into PE format 10, 11

bypassing hash verification

examples 164-167

bypassing UAC, examples 201, 202

CMSTP arbitrary privilege elevation execution 206, 207

elevated COM Object (IFileOperation) 203-205

elevated privileges, achieving through trusted path...