Bugtraq mailing list archives

Re: Insufficient Authentication vulnerability in Asus notebook


From: nameless <my.security.lists () gmail com>
Date: Thu, 14 May 2009 14:09:20 -0700

Steve Quan wrote:
Is there something like su/sudo in the Windows world ? How do windows
administrators handle this (ie accountability) ?

There is "runas".

There is no accountability with the local admin account.  You can
disable the account and use domain credentials, but when the domain
isn't available, you're screwed, so it is a poor decision.

This will be a big pissing contest as we all have our own opinions though...

---

In regards to changing the Admin account name, why make it easy for the
kiddiots?  It is trivial for any of us to bypass this, right?  But not
everyone is like us...  Sometimes those kiddiots get lucky, when we make
mistakes.

Changing the Administrator name is just another layer in the onion of
your defensive strategy.  It is done in conjunction with all of the
other changes that have been mentioned.  Which IMO are all equally
important.  Some are definitely more severe in regards to their
consequences, but they all carry a piece of the burden.

And I'm not trying to be a smart ass, but does anyone really use
LM-hashes anymore?


/Steve
---
On Thu, 14 May 2009, Mike Wilson wrote:

A better option is to set a strong password and set a local policy
that the local admin account cannot be accessed over the network.  I'm
a big advocate of that in all environments and prevents the need for
renaming the account to prevent automated attacks.

Thanks,
_________________________
Mike Wilson




-----Original Message-----
From: Susan Bradley [mailto:sbradcpa () pacbell net]
Sent: Thursday, May 14, 2009 2:39 PM
To: my.security.lists () gmail com
Cc: MustLive; bugtraq () securityfocus com
Subject: Re: Insufficient Authentication vulnerability in Asus notebook

We're talking XP Home here, right?  A admin account without a password
cannot be access remotely over the internet, so if you have physical
access at all times of that Asus netbook it's arguably more secure in
some circumstances.

nameless wrote:
Susan Bradley wrote:

3.  For XPs it's kinda handy to have a blank admin password when you
sometimes come in on a network and need to get to that particular
machine and you didn't set it up, otherwise you have to use the Admin
password boot disk trick and reset the password to blank.


You should only do the above recommendation, if you like to have your
boxes owned.

You should not have any administrative accounts named "Administrator"
and _all_ administrative accounts should have a _STRONG_ password
associated with them.

No exceptions.

Password safes are available at no charge.  If you somehow forget your
password, you can always reset it via AD or resetting the SAM.




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-- 
Rob

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