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PowerShell Automation and Scripting for Cybersecurity

PowerShell Automation and Scripting for Cybersecurity

By : Miriam C. Wiesner
4.8 (23)
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PowerShell Automation and Scripting for Cybersecurity

PowerShell Automation and Scripting for Cybersecurity

4.8 (23)
By: Miriam C. Wiesner

Overview of this book

Take your cybersecurity skills to the next level with this comprehensive guide to PowerShell security! Whether you’re a red or blue teamer, you’ll gain a deep understanding of PowerShell’s security capabilities and how to use them. After revisiting PowerShell basics and scripting fundamentals, you’ll dive into PowerShell Remoting and remote management technologies. You’ll learn how to configure and analyze Windows event logs and understand the most important event logs and IDs to monitor your environment. You’ll dig deeper into PowerShell’s capabilities to interact with the underlying system, Active Directory and Azure AD. Additionally, you’ll explore Windows internals including APIs and WMI, and how to run PowerShell without powershell.exe. You’ll uncover authentication protocols, enumeration, credential theft, and exploitation, to help mitigate risks in your environment, along with a red and blue team cookbook for day-to-day security tasks. Finally, you’ll delve into mitigations, including Just Enough Administration, AMSI, application control, and code signing, with a focus on configuration, risks, exploitation, bypasses, and best practices. By the end of this book, you’ll have a deep understanding of how to employ PowerShell from both a red and blue team perspective.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
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1
Part 1: PowerShell Fundamentals
6
Part 2: Digging Deeper – Identities, System Access, and Day-to-Day Security Tasks
12
Part 3: Securing PowerShell – Effective Mitigations In Detail

Exploring the Antimalware Scan Interface (AMSI)

In the past, attackers often used scripts or executables to have their malware run on client systems. But antivirus products got better and better over the years, which meant that file-based malware could be more easily identified and removed.

For malware authors, this was a serious problem that they tried to circumvent, and so they came up with the solution to run their malicious code directly in memory, without touching the hard disk. So, specifically, built-in programs such as PowerShell, VBScript, JavaScript, and other tools are being used to run their malware attacks. Attackers became creative and obfuscated their code so that it’s not obviously identified as malware.

Microsoft came up with a solution to inspect the code before running it, called the Antimalware Scan Interface (AMSI). AMSI has developed accordingly and can even protect against the most obfuscated attacks. However, it’s a constant cat-and-mouse...

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