HackTheBox Hack The Box: Buff Date January 9, 2021 Views 187 Views Reading Time < 1 Min Read In this machine we need to do some experimenting to avoid Windows Defender and figure out how to run a Python exploit when Python isn’t installed. HackTheBox Hack The Box: Haystack Date November 2, 2019 Views 177 Views Reading Time 5 Mins Read An interesting box sitting on the ELK (ElasticSearch, Logstash & Kibana) stack with a slant for the CTF side, but a very good introduction to those technologies. HackTheBox Hack The Box: La Casa de Papel Date September 2, 2019 Views 168 Views Reading Time 8 Mins Read Despite the “Easy” tag, La Casa de Papel was an elaborate box. A vulnerable service leads to an unusual, limited PHP shell which allows us to generate our own signed certificates to access a specific part of the site. From there, a local file inclusion lets us acquire SSH credentials and then escalate to root via a misconfiguration. HackTheBox Hack The Box: Lightweight Date May 12, 2019 Views 170 Views Reading Time 3 Mins Read A fairly straightforward machine, Lightweight lets us explore an insuficiently secured LDAP environment, where we intercept credentials by listening in to the network device. It also leads down the path of Linux capabilities, to find an openssl binary which can do far more than it should. Load More Loading More… You’ve reached the end of the list
HackTheBox Hack The Box: Buff Date January 9, 2021 Views 187 Views Reading Time < 1 Min Read In this machine we need to do some experimenting to avoid Windows Defender and figure out how to run a Python exploit when Python isn’t installed.
HackTheBox Hack The Box: Haystack Date November 2, 2019 Views 177 Views Reading Time 5 Mins Read An interesting box sitting on the ELK (ElasticSearch, Logstash & Kibana) stack with a slant for the CTF side, but a very good introduction to those technologies.
HackTheBox Hack The Box: La Casa de Papel Date September 2, 2019 Views 168 Views Reading Time 8 Mins Read Despite the “Easy” tag, La Casa de Papel was an elaborate box. A vulnerable service leads to an unusual, limited PHP shell which allows us to generate our own signed certificates to access a specific part of the site. From there, a local file inclusion lets us acquire SSH credentials and then escalate to root via a misconfiguration.
HackTheBox Hack The Box: Lightweight Date May 12, 2019 Views 170 Views Reading Time 3 Mins Read A fairly straightforward machine, Lightweight lets us explore an insuficiently secured LDAP environment, where we intercept credentials by listening in to the network device. It also leads down the path of Linux capabilities, to find an openssl binary which can do far more than it should.