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Brute Force: Password Cracking
Other sub-techniques of Brute Force (4)
ID | Name |
---|---|
T1110.001 | Password Guessing |
T1110.002 | Password Cracking |
T1110.003 | Password Spraying |
T1110.004 | Credential Stuffing |
Adversaries may use password cracking to attempt to recover usable credentials, such as plaintext passwords, when credential material such as password hashes are obtained. OS Credential Dumping is used to obtain password hashes, this may only get an adversary so far when Pass the Hash is not an option. Techniques to systematically guess the passwords used to compute hashes are available, or the adversary may use a pre-computed rainbow table to crack hashes. Cracking hashes is usually done on adversary-controlled systems outside of the target network.[1] The resulting plaintext password resulting from a successfully cracked hash may be used to log into systems, resources, and services in which the account has access.
Procedure Examples
Name | Description |
---|---|
APT3 |
APT3 has been known to brute force password hashes to be able to leverage plain text credentials.[2] |
APT41 |
APT41 performed password brute-force attacks on the local admin account.[3] |
Dragonfly 2.0 |
Dragonfly 2.0 dropped and executed tools used for password cracking, including Hydra and CrackMapExec.[4][5][6] |
FIN6 |
FIN6 has extracted password hashes from ntds.dit to crack offline.[7] |
Net Crawler |
Net Crawler uses a list of known credentials gathered through credential dumping to guess passwords to accounts as it spreads throughout a network.[8] |
Mitigations
Mitigation | Description |
---|---|
Multi-factor Authentication |
Use multi-factor authentication. Where possible, also enable multi-factor authentication on externally facing services. |
Password Policies |
Refer to NIST guidelines when creating password policies. [9] |
Detection
It is difficult to detect when hashes are cracked, since this is generally done outside the scope of the target network. Consider focusing efforts on detecting other adversary behavior used to acquire credential materials, such as OS Credential Dumping or Kerberoasting.
References
- Wikipedia. (n.d.). Password cracking. Retrieved December 23, 2015.
- Korban, C, et al. (2017, September). APT3 Adversary Emulation Plan. Retrieved January 16, 2018.
- Fraser, N., et al. (2019, August 7). Double DragonAPT41, a dual espionage and cyber crime operation APT41. Retrieved September 23, 2019.
- US-CERT. (2018, March 16). Alert (TA18-074A): Russian Government Cyber Activity Targeting Energy and Other Critical Infrastructure Sectors. Retrieved June 6, 2018.
- US-CERT. (2017, October 20). Alert (TA17-293A): Advanced Persistent Threat Activity Targeting Energy and Other Critical Infrastructure Sectors. Retrieved November 2, 2017.
- Kali. (2014, February 18). THC-Hydra. Retrieved November 2, 2017.
- FireEye Threat Intelligence. (2016, April). Follow the Money: Dissecting the Operations of the Cyber Crime Group FIN6. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
- Cylance. (2014, December). Operation Cleaver. Retrieved September 14, 2017.
- Grassi, P., et al. (2017, December 1). SP 800-63-3, Digital Identity Guidelines. Retrieved January 16, 2019.