A landmark global report from cybersecurity agencies emphasizes 17 attack techniques against Microsoft Active Directory and cautions organizations to step up protections. In the first of our two-part series, we offer five steps you can take today to shore up your AD defenses.
Microsoft’s Active Directory (AD) is at the heart of identity and access management (IAM) for organizations worldwide, making it an attractive target for cyberattackers. Concerns over the risks of AD compromise prompted cybersecurity agencies from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, U.K. and U.S. to issue a landmark report, Detecting and Mitigating Active Directory Compromises. The report, released in September, details 17 attack techniques, from Kerberoasting to Golden Ticket attacks, which, left unchecked, can enable attackers to take total control over systems.
In the first of our two-part series, we look beyond the report’s guidance for detecting and mitigating AD compromises to explore how organizations can institute a dynamic, proactive AD cybersecurity strategy. We discuss how continuous monitoring, adaptive defenses and risk-based prioritization can help security leaders protect their AD infrastructure. We provide five action items you can use to operationalize your identity security strategy.
In part two, we go beyond the basics to provide insight and guidance about additional areas of AD exposure worth addressing.
As the backbone of authentication and authorization in most organizations, AD controls access to sensitive data and critical systems. Identity has become the modern control plane for enterprises, and attackers know that compromising AD can be their gateway to a treasure trove of information and control. High-profile attacks, such as those by Storm-0501 and Conti ransomware, demonstrate the devastating financial and operational impact that can result when AD security is breached.
It’s important to note that the report issued by the cyberagencies — known collectively as the Five Eyes Alliance — is much more than a compliance checklist. Too often, we see organizations approach such cybersecurity guidance by taking a series of one-off actions, assuming that ticking a few boxes ensures lasting security.
In reality, attackers exploit vulnerabilities as soon as they arise. Point-in-time compliance efforts can't keep up with the adaptive nature of today's cyberthreats. To stay ahead, organizations must go beyond compliance, adopting a continuous, adaptive approach that anticipates and mitigates risks in real-time, ensuring that AD remains secure against evolving threats.
The guidance from the cybersecurity agencies makes it clear: Active Directory isn't a "set-it-and-forget-it" system.
As AD environments continuously evolve — whether through new users, permission updates or expanded cloud integrations — cybersecurity strategies must evolve in tandem. Misconfigurations and identity-based vulnerabilities open new doorways to risk because they don't stay put. This is precisely why organizations must adopt a structured, real-time approach to managing AD, including continuous monitoring, risk-based prioritization and adaptive security practices responsive to the shifting threat landscape.
Operationalizing the report’s guidance requires more than static point-in-time tech fixes. It calls for a series of game-changing steps to keep your AD secure.
Below, we break down five key areas to focus on as you turn the report's guidance into actionable steps.
Organizations often behave as though AD is a static system, a thing to be configured once and then assumed to be secure. However, as the Five Eyes report illustrates, AD is in constant flux, with each change potentially opening new vulnerabilities. From new hires and permission updates to expanding cloud connections, any shift in AD can create an unseen entry point for attackers. Real-time visibility and continuous monitoring are behavioral steps to stay ahead of evolving risks.
Attackers thrive on hidden weaknesses, like subtle misconfigurations and creeping permission drift, exploiting tactics like DCSync and Kerberoasting to infiltrate your systems silently. Without real-time oversight, these tactics can remain undetected. That's why it’s essential to identify and prioritize identity weaknesses as soon as they surface — catching risks early stops attackers in their tracks.
Not every weakness in Active Directory carries the same level of risk Treating each issue with equal priority can drain resources while leaving critical exposures unattended. A risk-based model automatically prioritizes AD weaknesses and allows security teams to focus on the exposures that matter most, rather than getting bogged down in low-risk issues.
Among the 17 attack tactics highlighted in the Five Eyes report, some — like DCSync — might be more critical in traditional infrastructures, while others, such as password spraying, may pose a higher risk in cloud-heavy environments. Automated risk scoring tailors prioritization to your organization's unique setup, ensuring that high-impact threats are addressed promptly.
A resilient Active Directory environment relies on enforcing least-privilege access, granting users only the permissions they need to perform their roles. However, over time, privileges can expand unintentionally — through changes in group memberships, role adjustments or emergency access that is not promptly revoked. This "privilege creep" broadens the attack surface attackers can exploit, as excessive permissions make lateral movement and privilege escalation easier.
Excessive permissions in Active Directory enable various attack techniques, including Silver Ticket compromises where adversaries forge Kerberos tickets for unauthorized access. Without least-privilege enforcement, attackers can exploit over-permissioned accounts to move laterally and access sensitive resources undetected. Proper privilege management is essential to prevent these and other AD-based cyberattacks.
Your security mindset sets the stage for securing AD. We all know that responding to incidents after they occur is painful, especially when there is a chance to preemptively identify and address potential threats. The nature of the Five Eyes guidance is proactive. Understanding Indicators of Exposure (IoE) and looking for those early warning signs can help teams address vulnerabilities before they become an attacker's foothold in the network.
A reactive approach leaves security teams in constant catch-up mode, dealing with incidents as they happen instead of eliminating root causes. Focusing on IoE systematically closes off pathways that adversaries exploit to infiltrate environments. It also allows security teams to expand their protective reach without adding to their alert fatigue. This equates to a broader security strategy prioritizing long-term resilience over short-term fixes.
Enterprise expansion pits cybersecurity teams against a sprawling landscape of domains, assets and identities — each adding layers of complexity. When security forms a phalanx, with a unified approach of shared insights and tools, efficiency emerges and gaps close. Scaling security demands a cohesive strategy that seamlessly integrates identity management, asset visibility and threat detection into a single, unified framework, ensuring consistent security practices.
Lack of unification is a recipe for disaster. Without a platform that normalizes data and promotes shared understanding, teams work in silos, widening gaps in coverage and leaving critical assets vulnerable. In complex, multi-domain environments, it’s essential to take a unified approach — fostered by integrated, scalable platforms — for fast, coordinated responses to cyberthreats. By closing these gaps, organizations can maintain comprehensive oversight, enabling teams to keep pace with growth while ensuring consistent security across the enterprise.
The above five steps offer a solid foundation for operationalizing the Five Eyes guidance. But stopping there misses important considerations for enhancing and adapting security strategies. In part two of this series, we go beyond the basics, offering guidance on achieving full coverage, addressing modern attack techniques and securing Active Directory and Entra ID as part of a holistic identity security approach.
Brinton Taylor is a senior product marketing leader with expertise in cybersecurity, specializing in identity exposure and operational technology security. At Tenable, Brinton plays a critical role in developing and executing strategies that drive understanding of Tenable's innovative solutions, including Tenable Identity Exposure and the Tenable One Platform. With a background that spans managing complex security challenges and working with diverse cybersecurity teams, Brinton is dedicated to helping organizations navigate the evolving security landscape with a proactive, risk-based approach. Passionate about enabling teams and customers, Brinton combines technical insight with strategic vision to make impactful, industry-leading security solutions accessible.