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00:46
@MechMK1 Wouldn't you ideally want to use cards that have some sort of challenge-response mechanism so that cards couldn't be cloned at all?
 
1 hour later…
02:10
Those could technically still be cloned, it would just require a bit more reversing/fuzzing/data collection. it also means you'd have to add a micro-processor (or realistically sensor circuit?) of some sort to the card, which is not desirable because complexity and cost
02:48
@belkarx if you make it into an HSM (sort of like a smartcard), then I guess it would be pretty difficult to clone. But of course, that's higher cost.
 
7 hours later…
09:22
This RFID attack only works against the most basic RFID identification tags. It's so well known it gave MIFARE its poor reputation. Newer (and a little more expensive) RFID authentication tags include asymmetric crypto that can't be replayed.
 
1 hour later…
10:42
@nobody As A. Hersean said, better cards basically have a private key and a certificate, and the whole authentication is quite a lot more back and forth
The thing is cost. You likely want to buy them for all your employees, so you buy them in packs of 1000 or so. And from what I've seen, Mifare DESFire cards cost ~$1.50 per piece and a normal key fob costs ~$0.25
So the DESFire card costs 6x as much, plus the need for a HSM or similar
A lot of higherups look at it like "85% cheaper?! Let's go with that one"
Sadly true
And then they rationalize it like "we're not a bank, we don't need top security" or "it's better than nothing" or "the building has its own security anyways"
lol
Not just the card
the whole system
$workplace has a very old system, and not really enough cards to go around
And then they get audited and we get paid twice: once to tell them they fucked up, and at least a second time to check their fix attempts.
2
That kinda ends up in people following other people into lifts "normal" or even sabotaging specific doors for card free access :D
Another location gives you an access card with your pass per user coded to where you need to go
10:54
@JourneymanGeek That's very good. Train people that it's normal to let other's in.
@A.Hersean Even on the "fix", they'll cheap out, being like "Which component can we replace to make it work?"
of course
And then they replace their shitty card reader with a slightly less shitty one, issue a handful of better access cards they received as "sample" to some people and say that's their "high security solution"
At work we start working on healthcare (hospitals & similar) cybersec. That will be fun. Lots to be done.
@MechMK1 As I once said
"There's many things here that annoy me, but If I started complaining about all of them I'd vomit blood"
10:57
@MechMK1 and swap out the dumb passes for access cards
Which immediately simplifies and improves access control
I once picked the door to our small office, which was still secured by keys
As I always say, "we may not be able to afford to go cheap here"
11:48
@MechMK1 this was a good video... when it loaded the first frame I thought "this looks like The Lockpicking Lawyer videos... and it was!
physical security is utterly overlooked
and even "secure access" are not that secure anyway. Watching the LPL videos I am convinced no lock is secure anyway.
here in my building someone opened the gate, stole a bike and never got caught. We have those RFID tags (an upgrade from 4 digit passwords we had before)... but I guess if someone put a strong magnet on the controller it would open
tenants will hold a meeting Saturday to discuss the situation, but I won't be around to attend
@ThoriumBR Actually, LPL once did a talk on security at a conference
I saw that too
For everyone
"My favourite video is called "Getting into my wife's beaver". You should have a look."
His april fools videos are the best and I am so hyped for next week
I watched that one too! it's one I laughed so much at
one video of physical security I like is youtube.com/watch?v=rnmcRTnTNC8
12:03
This is mine
My funniest moment in this video was "Only at Defcon will people look at someone using TOR and say he's likely of medium computer literacy."
 
4 hours later…
16:24
@MechMK1 What is "advanced" in that case? Tails+tor? Or is it just that using Tor in and of itself does not make you technologically competent (whereas it would seem impressive to laypeople)
I feel like tor is heavily overhyped as "dangerous". While there are some very illegal parts, most of it is drug selling and govt honeypots. And there are some more "normal" forums as well, it's not all 'dark web'
also as for physical pentesting talks, I quite enjoyed this one: youtube.com/watch?v=JsVtHqICeKE
@belkarx Uses lynx or elinks (or maybe even curl) and proxying through your own botnet ;)
Lmao. botnet's probably less traceable sadly
 
1 hour later…
17:47
@belkarx If you take the average computer user, someone using TOR is probably pretty high up on the literacy scale. The point is that among expertes, either here or attendants of DEFCON, we have a very skewed perception of what the "average" user is able to do.
18:07
@belkarx this one is really very good
I always assume that if I say, "Open a command prompt and type i p config dash all", people will open a command prompt and type ipconfig -all. I'm usually wrong, even with people that I have guided through this exact same command before.
18:23
@FireQuacker So you're telling me they don't get stuck at the "Open a command prompt" part?
18:53
@nobody Weirdly enough, that doesn't catch people nearly as often as the space between ipconfig and -all does
 
2 hours later…
20:44
I was helping a longtime WSL user (and programmer) execute a python script yesterday. I was wrong to expect they knew what an interpreter was, or how to specify flags (even just --help) to the python script. A lot of us are living in technology-competent bubbles (self-imposed?) so we forget that the average individual has no clue what they're doing.
21:28
user image
2
@ThoriumBR Also, you can just paste the XKCD link as is
And you get title text as well like that
really? TIL!
made my day
Glad I could help
(That actually made me smile a lot)
21:31
today was the day I wanted to have my phone recording a conversation
so you guys know I am a security conscious guy, and I had to access a gov account and it was locked. I had to go to a bank to restore the access and found out my email and my phone were changed.
so I asked the guys to change back, changed my password, and went home. I couldn't access the account from my phone at all, it just said "the amount of access attempts was exhausted for today, try tomorrow"
first thing I did in the morning was to try, and got the same message. So I got to the bank again.
and now, the recorder thing: the clerk said "Yes, there was an unauthorized access to your account, people changed your records here, they scheduled a withdraw, but don't managed to get anything because the scheduled day haven't arrived yet. so your account is secure"
how in brazen tropical hellish fires of the abyss someone accessed my account, changed my data and scheduled a withdraw and my account is safe?
I told her "well, I work in IT Security, and this statement does not make any sense"
she said "I know you are uncomfortable, but rest assured that you suffered no financial loss, your funds are safe..."
and I said "saying I am uncomfortable is a great understatement..."
one of the auditors of my team said that if I had recorded the conversation I would be eligible to be paid a restitution from the bank even if there were no financial loss...
22:16
and the way to deny the attackers the access to my money was to open an account on that bank so the money will end up in my hands and not on the attacker's...
what do you guys think I will do the second the money lands on the account?
@MechMK1 Tor, not TOR.
@belkarx Tor hidden services are not the entirety of the Tor network. I use Tor exclusively but I rarely go to onion sites.
22:36
I once used a Tor hidden service on my home PC so I could SSH-in from anywhere without NAT getting in the way
Lol me too.
I have this deja vu that you mentioned that before and I replied the same way... hm...
But yeah, Tor is a great way to bust NAT while remaining anonymous. And now days you can also enable an "insecure mode" for the HS so it only creates one hop instead of three, which improves performance.
@forest I don't think this is true anymore
IIRC, there's no way to change the hops to 1...
@ThoriumBR I'm fairly sure it is, since it's used by some large websites that have HSes.
@ThoriumBR It's only for the circuit built by a non-anonymous HS.
sure, on HS... I misread
for the clearnet you cannot change the hop count to 1
Facebook has no reason to hide its location for example. Clients can also change their hop numbers, but only by editing the source code (or using a third-party client, I guess).
Right.
23:14
@forest true, Tor is merely a protocol (and a great one at that). Are there any other interesting non-conventional ways you've used it besides punching through NAT?
hmmm
I've used it to bypass firewall-based censorship, although I'm not sure that counts as "non-conventional" given that it's one of the stated purposes of Tor. It's just not one of the well-known purposes (outside of certain countries).
Oh, I supposed I've used for dynamic DNS.
Could you elaborate on dynamic DNS?
It's a way to dynamically update a DNS server when the host IP changes.
it's a DNS provider that allows you to run a client on your PC and it will change the domain pointing to you when your IP changes
Dynamic DNS (DDNS) is a method of automatically updating a name server in the Domain Name System (DNS), often in real time, with the active DDNS configuration of its configured hostnames, addresses or other information. The term is used to describe two different concepts. The first is "dynamic DNS updating" which refers to systems that are used to update traditional DNS records without manual editing. These mechanisms are explained in RFC 2136, and use the TSIG mechanism to provide security. The second kind of dynamic DNS permits lightweight and immediate updates often using an update client, which...
23:19
noip.net is one of those
dyndns.com another one
DynDNS still exists?
yep
not free anymore, but exists. my ancient wifi router had an embedded client for them
a dlink dir-600
Anyway, dynamic DNS is a solution to roaming or mobile servers, or any server which won't necessarily always keep the same IP. Tor gets around that by not requiring DNS in the first place. No matter what the server's IP changes to, the server's Tor client will ensure that attempts to connect to an HS it hosts will always reach it from anywhere within the Tor network.
Yay p2p
It's also a great way to get around needing an SSL certificate! As long as you typed the URL in correctly, you can be guaranteed that you will only be connected to the server which has the private key for that onion domain. Of course, you can use an SSL cert on top of it, which I suppose helps if you're using OV or EV.
23:22
Aren't "roaming or mobile servers" most likely to be Tor hidden services? In what other scenarios would you have the IP changing often enough that dynamic DNS is desirable?
@belkarx Anyone who's running a small server behind a router with a dynamic IP, which is most people.
Ah I see
Does anyone here have a homelab btw
Never heard of it. Searching now.
r/homelab
This thing? homelab.com
23:24
personal NAS/networking/compute setup
Oh. Yes. I have my own network and a small cluster of computers that I use for hash cracking and fuzzing, a switch to connect them together, a small management server, a DMZ...
is your compute cluster GPU or CPU
I have a small GPU cluster but it's pretty outdated right now. 90% of what I use is CPU.
Especially since I do more fuzzing than hash cracking, and GPUs aren't ideal for fuzzing (actually, they can't fuzz at all as far as I'm aware. Maybe do symbolic execution or fuzz very small individual functions or something...)
I see
I also have a thin client so I can be anywhere near my house and connect to my main system without having to lug a giant desktop around. :P
("Near my house" because my latency is too high to run anything but SSH remotely)
Random question: Does anyone here know much about GPS?
in The Hangar, yesterday, by forest
Do aviation-certified GPSes have any particular resistance to spoofing or jamming that typical consumer GPSes lack?
Trying to improve an old answer of mine:
12
A: Mitigate Time Spoofing Attack

forestThere is no single way to mitigate time spoofing attacks. However, getting time information from several sources and ensuring none of the sources too strongly disagree with each other is a start. NTP The Network Time Protocol, with the common version 3 specified in RFC 1305, is the most widely us...

The thing is, I know very little about how GPS systems work or the security issues surrounding it.
In particular, the security issues surrounding using it to obtain the current time.
23:39
I know a fair bit about radio but not about GPS in general, maybe check out this link? csr.utexas.edu/texas_pwv/midterm/gabor/gps.html
I'll check it out. Is that up to date?
No, and probably doesn't go into as much detail as necessary, but I believe the frequencies and design spec are still valid
That was a great answer btw, fascinating read
It's more the modern implementation of GPS that I'm curious about, since I'm aware that there are many ways to heuristically detect GPS spoofing, but information on that seems very limited. It seems like information on spoofing which influences the time the receiver believes it is is even less common.
23:57
Then again, I don't even know how a modern GPS receiver calculates time from the signals it receives...
So I probably do just need to read up on the basics a bit more before trying to understand how a modern receiver does it.

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