Conference Talks – November 2021
2021-11-01 19:00:00 Author: research.nccgroup.com(查看原文) 阅读量:30 收藏

This month, members of NCC Group will be presenting their work at the following conferences:

  • Jennifer Fernick & David Wheeler (Linux Foundation), “Keynote: Securing Open Source Software”, to be presented at The Linux Foundation Member Summit (November 2-4 2021)
  • Brian Hong, “Sleight of ARM: Demystifying Intel Houdini”, to be presented at Ekoparty (November 2-6 2021)
  • Sanne Maasakkers, “Phish like an APT: Phenomenal pretexting for persuasive phishing”, to be presented at Ekoparty (November 2-6 2021)
  • Frans van Dorsselaer, “Symposium on Post-Quantum Cryptography: Act now, not later”, to be presented at the CWI Symposium on Post-Quantum Cryptography (November 3 2021)
  • Pepjin Hack & Zong-Yu Wu, “We Wait, Because We Know You – Inside the Ransomware Negotiation Economics”, to be presented at Black Hat Europe 2021 (November 8-11 2021)
  • Philip Marsden, “The 5G threat landscape”, to be presented at Control Systems Cybersecurity Europe 2021 (November 9-10 2021)
  • Pepjin Hack (NCC Group), Kelly Jackson Higgins (Dark Reading, & Rik Turner (Omdia), “Dark Reading panel: Ransomware as the New Normal”, to be presented at Black Hat Europe (Business Hall) (November 10 2021)
  • Alex Plaskett, “Pwning the Windows 10 Kernel with NTFS and WNF”, to be presented at Power of Community 2021 (November 11-12 2021) 
  • Tennisha Martin, “Keynote: The Hacker’s Guide to Mentorship: Fostering the Diverse Workforce of the Future”, to be presented at SANS Pentest HackFest (November 15-16 2021)
  • Jennifer Fernick, “Financial Post-Quantum Cryptography in Production: A CISO’s Guide”, to be presented at FS-ISAC (Nov 30 2021)

Please join us!


Keynote: Securing Open Source Software
Jennifer Fernick (NCC Group) & David Wheeler (Linux Foundation)
The Linux Foundation Member Summit
November 2-4 2021


Sleight of ARM: Demystifying Intel Houdini
Brian Hong

Ekoparty
November 2-6 2021

In the recent years, we have seen some of the major players in the industry switch from x86-based processors to ARM processors. Most notable is Apple, who has supported the transition to ARM from x86 with a binary translator, Rosetta 2, which has recently gotten the attention of many researchers and reverse engineers. However, you might be surprised to know that Intel has their own binary translator, Houdini, which runs ARM binaries on x86.

In this talk, we will discuss Intel’s proprietary Houdini translator, which is primarily used by Android on x86 platforms, such as higher-end Chromebooks and desktop Android emulators. We will start with a high-level discussion of how Houdini works and is loaded into processes. We will then dive into the low-level internals of the Houdini engine and memory model, including several security weaknesses it introduces into processes using it. Lastly, we will discuss methods to escape the Houdini environment, execute arbitrary ARM and x86, and write Houdini-targeted malware that bypasses existing platform analysis.

Phish like an APT: Phenomenal pretexting for persuasive phishing
Sanne Maasakkers 

Ekoparty
November 2-6 2021

Symposium on Post-Quantum Cryptography: Act now, not later
Frans van Dorsselaer 

CWI Symposium on Post-Quantum Cryptography
November 3 2021

The Symposium Post-Quantum Cryptography is part of a series organized by CWI Cryptology Group and TNO. The first symposium in April 2021 was a general introduction to the problem from the perspective of industry, government, and end user. In this second episode we zoom in on a number of specific topics, including quantum-safe PKI, the relation between PQC and QKD, and PQC standards & implementation. The symposium is aimed at higher management and security professionals from government, private sector, and industry.

Cryptography is at the heart of internet security. However, much of the currently deployed cryptography is vulnerable to quantum attacks, which will become effective once large-scale quantum computers become feasible. Therefore, the affected cryptographic standards must be replaced by ones that offer security against quantum attacks. The post-quantum cryptography transition may take organizations ten years to complete, or longer. To remain secure and comply with legal and regulatory requirements, affected organizations should act now. What do you need to know – and what can you do – in order to continue your course of business securely?

“We Wait, Because We Know You” – Inside the Ransomware Negotiation Economics
Pepjin Hack & Zong-Yu Wu

Black Hat Europe 2021
November 8-11 2021

Organizations worldwide continue to face waves of digital extortion in the form of targeted ransomware. Digital extortion is therefore now classified as the most prominent form of cybercrime and the most devastating and pervasive threat to functioning IT environments. Currently, research on targeted ransomware activity primarily looks at how these attacks are carried out from a technical perspective. Little research has however focused on the economics behind digital extortions and digital extortion negotiation strategies using empirical methods.

This session explores three main topics. First, can we explain how adversaries use economic models to maximize their profits? Second, what does this tell us about the position of the victim during the negotiation phase? And third, what strategies can ransomware victims leverage to even the playing field? To answer these questions, over seven hundred attacker-victim negotiations, between 2019 and 2020, were collected and bundled into a dataset. This dataset was subsequently analyzed using both quantitative and qualitative methods.

Analysis of the final ransom agreement reveals that adversaries already know how much victims will pay, even before the negotiations have started. Each ransomware gang has created its own negotiation and pricing strategies meant to maximize its profits. We however provide multiple strategies which can be used by victims to obtain a more favorable outcome. These strategies are taken from negotiation failures and successes derived from the cases we have analyzed and are accompanied by examples and quotes from actual conversations.

When ransomware hits a company, they find themselves in the middle of an unknown situation. One thing that makes those more manageable is to have as much information as possible. We aim to provide victims with some practical tips they can use when they find themselves in the middle of that crisis.

The 5G threat landscape
Philip Marsden

Control Systems Cybersecurity Europe 2021
November 9-10 2021

While the move to 5G mobile deployments presents a wealth of opportunities and capabilities for us all, the technology also introduces new vulnerabilities and threats. There are three main threat vectors across the various 5G domains and within these are sub-threats that describe additional points of vulnerability for threat actors to exploit. While not all inclusive, these types of threats have the potential to increase risk to a particular mobile operator as they transitions to 5G. The Policy and Standards, securing the Supply Chain and finally the 5G systems architecture itself all have various vulnerabilities associated with them and are the foundation for securing the 5G future infrastructure. These threats could be cascaded by attackers to further leverage access to your 5G network and compromise hosts or the endpoint user devices be it a IoT device, a handset or a connected vehicle. This overview will attempt to show these threats and specific issues that might pose a risk to IoT/Control system devices and highlight how to mitigate these. 

Dark Reading panel: Ransomware as the New Normal
Pepjin Hack (NCC Group), Kelly Jackson Higgins (Dark Reading), & Rik Turner (Omdia)

Black Hat Europe (Business Hall) 
November 10 2021

It’s the same story, different victim, over and over: a hospital, school system, or business (think Colonial Pipeline) gets hit with a ransomware attack that locks down their servers, their operations, and in the case of healthcare organizations, places their patients at physical risk. Even with increased awareness, known best practices, and now, the governments like the US putting the squeeze on attackers and their cryptocurrency cover, there’s still no real end in sight to ransomware.  

A panel of security experts will discuss and debate why ransomware attacks are so easy to pull off, why they’re so hard to stop – and what organizations need to do to double down on their defenses against one of these debilitating cyberattacks. 

Pwning the Windows 10 Kernel with NTFS and WNF
Alex Plaskett

Power of Community 2021
November 11-12 2021

A local privilege escalation vulnerability (CVE-2021-31956) 0day was identified as being exploited in the wild by Kaspersky. At the time it affected a broad range of Windows versions (right up to the latest and greatest of Windows 10).
With no access to the exploit or details of how it worked other than a vulnerability summary the following plan was enacted:

  1. Understand how exploitable the issue was in the presence of features such as the Windows 10 Kernel Heap-Backed Pool (Segment Heap).
  2. Determine how the Windows Notification Framework (WNF) could be used to enable novel exploit primitives.
  3. Understand the challenges an attacker faces with modern kernel pool exploitation and what factors are in play to reduce reliability and hinder exploitation.
  4. Gain insight from this exploit which could be used to enable detection and response by defenders.

The talk covers the above key areas and provides a detailed walk through, moving from introducing the subject, all the way up to the knowledge which is needed for both offense and defence on modern Windows versions.

Keynote: The Hacker’s Guide to Mentorship: Fostering the Diverse Workforce of the Future
Tennisha Martin

SANS Pentest HackFest
November 15-16 2021

Financial Post-Quantum Cryptography in Production: A CISO’s Guide
Jennifer Fernick

FS-ISAC
November 30 2021

Security leaders have to constantly filter signal from noise about emerging threats, including security risks associated with novel emerging technologies like quantum computing. In this presentation, we will explore post-quantum cryptography specifically through the lens of upgrading financial institutions’ cryptographic infrastructure.

We’re going to take a different approach to most post-quantum presentations, by not discussing quantum mechanics or why quantum computing is a threat, and instead starting from the known fact that most of the public-key cryptography on the internet will be trivially broken by existing quantum algorithms, and cover strategic applied security topics to address this need for a cryptographic upgrade, such as:  

  • Financial services use cases for cryptography and quantum-resistance, and context-specific nuances in computing environments such as mainframes, HSMs, public cloud, CI/CD pipelines, third-party and multi-party financial protocols, customer-facing systems, and more 
  • Whether quantum technologies like QKD are necessary to achieve quantum-resistant security
  • Post-quantum cryptographic algorithms for digital signatures, key distribution, and encryption 
  • How much confidence cryptanalysts currently have in the quantum-resistance of those ciphers, and what this may mean for cryptography standards over time 
  • Deciding when to begin integrating PQC in a world of competing technology standards 
  • Designing extensible cryptographic architectures
  • Actions financial institutions’ cryptography teams can take immediately 
  • How to talk about this risk with your corporate board

This presentation is rooted in both research and practice, is entirely vendor- and product-agnostic, and will be easily accessible to non-cryptographers, helping security leaders think through the practical challenges and tradeoffs when deploying quantum-resistant technologies. 


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