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Christopher Carboni - Handler On Duty
Special SANSFIRE 2009 Podcast Presentations - Adrien de Beaupre
Our seventh presentation is by one of our Handlers by the name of Adrien de Beaupre. Adrien is one of our Handlers from Canada. This is a presentation entitled:
"Developing Cyber Threat Intelligence"
I would suggest the way to get these podcasts is through iTunes (if you have iTunes) if not, then you can use whatever method works best for you and follow this link:
http://isc.sans.org/podcast.xml
In order to subscribe through iTunes click here:
Audio and Slides are here: https://www.sans.org/webcasts/show.php?webcastid=92553
-- Joel Esler | http://www.joelesler.net | http://twitter.com/joelesler
De-Obfuscation Submissions
Here are a list of sites that readers have submitted as being particularly useful for de-obfuscation.
Although it should go without saying, I'll say it anyway ... these tools may or may not have been tested. Use them at your own risk.
From Pat:
The DNSStuff site provides some free tools one of which allows you to de-obfuscate URLs. The tools are can be found at http://www.dnsstuff.com/tools/tools/.
From Andrewj (and several others):
There are many tools, but these are two of the easiest to use:
wepawet: http://wepawet.iseclab.org/
malzilla: http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=203466
From Kevin:
I generally use:
http://www.yellowpipe.com/yis/tools/encrypter/index.php
http://scriptasylum.com/tutorials/encdec/encode-decode.html
Jeffery adds:
http://www.johngaughan.net/toys/urldecode.php
http://www.greymagic.com/security/tools/decoder/
http://ln.hixie.ch/?start=1073090889&count=1
Richard offers:
This is a site I found recently that has come in handy for me:
http://www.crypo.com/
Danny writes:
One of my own sites offers a set of tools for three simple deobfuscation types: base64, URL-encoding, and HTML entities. Entry page at: http://spamwars.com/tools.html
Christopher Carboni - Handler On Duty
Special SANSFIRE 2009 Podcast Presentations - Pedro Bueno
Our sixth presentation is by one of our Handlers by the name of Pedro Bueno. Pedro is one of our Handlers, originally from Brazil (so, hence the accent you will hear) and now residing in Santa Clara. He is a malware researcher for a large Anti-Virus firm. This is a presentation entitled:
"Malwares, Money and Criminal/Terror Activity. The Dangerous Relationship"
I would suggest the way to get these podcasts is through iTunes (if you have iTunes) if not, then you can use whatever method works best for you and follow this link:
http://isc.sans.org/podcast.xml
In order to subscribe through iTunes click here:
Audio and Slides are here: https://www.sans.org/webcasts/show.php?webcastid=92548
-- Joel Esler | http://www.joelesler.net | http://twitter.com/joelesler
Obfuscated Code
Earlier today we received a fairly common email from a reader asking us for help de-obfuscating some (in this case) HTML code.
If you have any favorite sites you use to de-obfuscate code whether it's html, jacascript or anything else, send them in and I'll post them as a diary that can be bookmarked as a reference.
Christopher Carboni - Handler On Duty
Comments
Anonymous
Dec 3rd 2022
9 months ago
Anonymous
Dec 3rd 2022
9 months ago
<a hreaf="https://technolytical.com/">the social network</a> is described as follows because they respect your privacy and keep your data secure. The social networks are not interested in collecting data about you. They don't care about what you're doing, or what you like. They don't want to know who you talk to, or where you go.
<a hreaf="https://technolytical.com/">the social network</a> is not interested in collecting data about you. They don't care about what you're doing, or what you like. They don't want to know who you talk to, or where you go. The social networks only collect the minimum amount of information required for the service that they provide. Your personal information is kept private, and is never shared with other companies without your permission
Anonymous
Dec 26th 2022
9 months ago
Anonymous
Dec 26th 2022
9 months ago
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<a hreaf="https://defineprogramming.com/the-public-bathroom-near-me-find-nearest-public-toilet/"> public bathroom near me</a>
Anonymous
Dec 26th 2022
9 months ago
<a hreaf="https://defineprogramming.com/the-public-bathroom-near-me-find-nearest-public-toilet/"> nearest public toilet to me</a>
<a hreaf="https://defineprogramming.com/the-public-bathroom-near-me-find-nearest-public-toilet/"> public bathroom near me</a>
Anonymous
Dec 26th 2022
9 months ago
Anonymous
Dec 26th 2022
9 months ago
https://defineprogramming.com/
Dec 26th 2022
9 months ago
distribute malware. Even if the URL listed on the ad shows a legitimate website, subsequent ad traffic can easily lead to a fake page. Different types of malware are distributed in this manner. I've seen IcedID (Bokbot), Gozi/ISFB, and various information stealers distributed through fake software websites that were provided through Google ad traffic. I submitted malicious files from this example to VirusTotal and found a low rate of detection, with some files not showing as malware at all. Additionally, domains associated with this infection frequently change. That might make it hard to detect.
https://clickercounter.org/
https://defineprogramming.com/
Dec 26th 2022
9 months ago
rthrth
Jan 2nd 2023
8 months ago