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It’s risky to go alone, though, so take this map with you.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":260,"content":261},{},[262,266,272],{"nodeType":247,"value":263,"marks":264,"data":265},"Inspired by the classic 1980s video game* ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":267,"marks":268,"data":271},"Oregon Trail",[269],{"type":270},"italic",{},{"nodeType":247,"value":273,"marks":274,"data":275},", we’ve put together the following guide for intrepid security teams who are traveling across potentially unknown territory as they uncover their identity attack surface, including shadow identities and apps, and secure it against modern identity attacks.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":278,"content":284},"embedded-entry-block",{"target":279},{"sys":280},{"id":281,"type":282,"linkType":283},"3Ys8l6lqQcWOFX5O6QSulO","Link","Entry",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":286,"content":287},{},[288,292,301],{"nodeType":247,"value":289,"marks":290,"data":291},"(*For Push fans outside the U.S., Oregon Trail followed a group of pioneers as they attempted to cross the continent in a covered wagon, avoiding wild animals and hunting for food along the way. 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Let’s take a look.",[],{},{"nodeType":320,"data":321,"content":322},"hr",{},[],{"nodeType":243,"data":324,"content":325},{},[326],{"nodeType":247,"value":327,"marks":328,"data":329},"First 30 days: Get intel and secure against bears",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":331,"content":332},{},[333],{"nodeType":247,"value":334,"marks":335,"data":336},"This guide assumes you’ve identified a few identity security goals already. These probably include things like:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":339,"content":340},"unordered-list",{},[341,367,391,401,411],{"nodeType":342,"data":343,"content":344},"list-item",{},[345],{"nodeType":252,"data":346,"content":347},{},[348,352,363],{"nodeType":247,"value":349,"marks":350,"data":351},"Closing gaps in existing security controls to protect against MFA bypass attacks like Adversary-in-the-Middle ",[],{},{"nodeType":353,"data":354,"content":358},"entry-hyperlink",{"target":355},{"sys":356},{"id":357,"type":282,"linkType":283},"11C3shj5SlkS8sAd3AlYDp",[359],{"nodeType":247,"value":360,"marks":361,"data":362},"(AiTM) phishing toolkits",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":364,"marks":365,"data":366},".",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":368,"content":369},{},[370],{"nodeType":252,"data":371,"content":372},{},[373,377,387],{"nodeType":247,"value":374,"marks":375,"data":376},"Increasing 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others.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":436,"content":437},{},[438],{"nodeType":247,"value":439,"marks":440,"data":441},"It’s the identity security equivalent of bear deterrent (something sadly lacking on the Oregon Trail), and it takes just a couple of minutes.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":443,"content":444},{},[445],{"nodeType":247,"value":446,"marks":447,"data":448},"You can also set additional security controls in Monitor mode and begin collecting valuable insights from your users’ account and app activity.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":450,"content":451},{},[452],{"nodeType":247,"value":453,"marks":454,"data":455},"Here’s what we recommend for your first 30 days using Push:",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":458,"content":459},"heading-2",{},[460],{"nodeType":247,"value":461,"marks":462,"data":463},"Enable phishing tool detection in Warn or Block mode",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":465,"content":466},{},[467,471,477],{"nodeType":247,"value":468,"marks":469,"data":470},"Begin protecting 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You don’t need to configure anything for this feature, and you can check for any verified true positives by viewing the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":608,"marks":609,"data":611},"Vulnerable identities",[610],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":613,"marks":614,"data":615}," section of the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":617,"marks":618,"data":620},"Dashboard",[619],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":622,"marks":623,"data":624},". ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":626,"content":627},{},[628],{"nodeType":247,"value":629,"marks":630,"data":631},"We recommend investigating immediately and taking action to remediate any accounts with verified stolen credentials.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":633,"content":637},{"target":634},{"sys":635},{"id":636,"type":282,"linkType":283},"150dE4aTzofOwFXJCtGkJF",[],{"nodeType":457,"data":639,"content":640},{},[641],{"nodeType":247,"value":642,"marks":643,"data":644},"Enable additional security controls in Monitor mode",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":646,"content":647},{},[648,652,657],{"nodeType":247,"value":649,"marks":650,"data":651},"Next, set up additional security controls in ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":653,"marks":654,"data":656},"Monitor",[655],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":658,"marks":659,"data":660}," mode so you can begin finetuning your configuration or adding to ignore lists. A few details to keep in mind:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":662,"content":663},{},[664,703,726,749],{"nodeType":342,"data":665,"content":666},{},[667],{"nodeType":252,"data":668,"content":669},{},[670,675,679,690,694,699],{"nodeType":247,"value":671,"marks":672,"data":674},"For all controls",[673],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":676,"marks":677,"data":678},", update your ",[],{},{"nodeType":353,"data":680,"content":684},{"target":681},{"sys":682},{"id":683,"type":282,"linkType":283},"2q4iZicL3D85XGTsYZ5mgK",[685],{"nodeType":247,"value":686,"marks":687,"data":689},"Custom login URLs",[688],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":691,"marks":692,"data":693}," list on the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":695,"marks":696,"data":698},"Settings",[697],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":700,"marks":701,"data":702}," page to include any custom URLs you use for your identity provider or other important apps, so that Push can correctly identify those logins as belonging to your IdP (or other app).",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":704,"content":705},{},[706],{"nodeType":252,"data":707,"content":708},{},[709,714,718,722],{"nodeType":247,"value":710,"marks":711,"data":713},"For SSO password protection",[712],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":715,"marks":716,"data":717},", we recommend starting in ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":653,"marks":719,"data":721},[720],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":723,"marks":724,"data":725}," so you can identify any sites in your environment that cause false positives, such as sites that are configured to legitimately allow use of SSO credentials. Then add these sites to your ignore list. By running in monitor mode for a few weeks, you can also get a sense of how often employees are reusing their corporate IdP credentials on other sites where they shouldn’t, such as personal apps.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":727,"content":728},{},[729],{"nodeType":252,"data":730,"content":731},{},[732,737,741,745],{"nodeType":247,"value":733,"marks":734,"data":736},"For cloned login page detection",[735],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":738,"marks":739,"data":740},", set the mode to ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":653,"marks":742,"data":744},[743],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":746,"marks":747,"data":748}," to receive events when employees visit a site using a cloned login screen for important apps including your identity provider.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":750,"content":751},{},[752],{"nodeType":252,"data":753,"content":754},{},[755,760,764,768],{"nodeType":247,"value":756,"marks":757,"data":759},"For URL blocking",[758],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":761,"marks":762,"data":763},", test a blocked URL or begin compiling a list of URLs you wish to block, such as AiTM sites discovered through phishing sites you find while using the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":472,"marks":765,"data":767},[766],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":769,"marks":770,"data":771}," feature.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":773,"content":774},{},[775,779,783,787,792],{"nodeType":247,"value":776,"marks":777,"data":778},"To see events generated by these controls, filter the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":564,"marks":780,"data":782},[781],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":784,"marks":785,"data":786}," page. Go to the filters icon, then select ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":788,"marks":789,"data":791},"Events > By type",[790],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":793,"marks":794,"data":795}," from the dropdown and choose the specific control to see associated events.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":797,"content":801},{"target":798},{"sys":799},{"id":800,"type":282,"linkType":283},"2M0Cjc2Wo9L7c9rIQebx0S",[],{"nodeType":457,"data":803,"content":804},{},[805],{"nodeType":247,"value":806,"marks":807,"data":808},"Set up alerts for your security team",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":810,"content":811},{},[812,816,821],{"nodeType":247,"value":813,"marks":814,"data":815},"Push can send notifications of interesting employee activity to a Microsoft Teams or Slack channel so you can stay on top of new apps and account security findings. In the admin console, go to the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":817,"marks":818,"data":820},"ChatOps",[819],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":822,"marks":823,"data":824}," page and integrate your Teams or Slack instance, then enable topics you wish to get notified about.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":826,"content":830},{"target":827},{"sys":828},{"id":829,"type":282,"linkType":283},"OObhJQA1HMcmwBvpWfmC7",[],{"nodeType":320,"data":832,"content":833},{},[],{"nodeType":243,"data":835,"content":836},{},[837],{"nodeType":247,"value":838,"marks":839,"data":840},"First 60 days: Go (threat) hunting",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":842,"content":843},{},[844],{"nodeType":247,"value":845,"marks":846,"data":847},"Now you’re ready to survey the landscape and see where there are dangers hiding among your workforce identities such as missing MFA or SSO, unused accounts, compromised passwords, and unsanctioned or untrustworthy apps and integrations. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":849,"content":850},{},[851,855,859],{"nodeType":247,"value":852,"marks":853,"data":854},"Luckily, Push doesn’t make you forage for the important information. Use the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":617,"marks":856,"data":858},[857],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":860,"marks":861,"data":862}," in the Push admin console to pinpoint vulnerable identities and see SSO trends and other insights.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":864,"content":865},{},[866],{"nodeType":247,"value":867,"marks":868,"data":869},"After getting a baseline understanding of your ecosystem, you can begin translating your security policies into actionable controls by preparing end-users and creating the foundation for control configuration rules.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":871,"content":872},{},[873],{"nodeType":247,"value":874,"marks":875,"data":876},"Here’s what we recommend for your second month using Push:",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":878,"content":879},{},[880],{"nodeType":247,"value":881,"marks":882,"data":883},"Understand which identities are most vulnerable to account takeover",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":885,"content":886},{},[887,891,895,899,903],{"nodeType":247,"value":888,"marks":889,"data":890},"On the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":617,"marks":892,"data":894},[893],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":896,"marks":897,"data":898},", you can identify which identities are most at risk because they use a leaked, reused, or weak password and lack MFA by referencing the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":608,"marks":900,"data":902},[901],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":904,"marks":905,"data":906}," section.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":908,"content":909},{},[910,915,919,924],{"nodeType":247,"value":911,"marks":912,"data":914},"Tip: ",[913],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":916,"marks":917,"data":918},"Toggle the view to ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":920,"marks":921,"data":923},"All identities",[922],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":925,"marks":926,"data":927}," if you are not yet using the sensitivity labels for apps to get a full picture of your data.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":929,"content":933},{"target":930},{"sys":931},{"id":932,"type":282,"linkType":283},"4xPy4cr18jk7JV7TWqnmoy",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":935,"content":936},{},[937],{"nodeType":247,"value":938,"marks":939,"data":940},"Select each slice of the chart to go to a filtered list of the accounts with those security issues. You can then evaluate which accounts pose the biggest risk, whether they belong to high-sensitivity apps or high-value roles, such as admins or executives, or whether there are any data patterns, such as a cluster of account issues that belong to specific teams, that will help you decide on a remediation strategy.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":942,"content":943},{},[944],{"nodeType":247,"value":945,"marks":946,"data":947},"As mentioned earlier, we recommend taking immediate action for any accounts with verified stolen credentials, especially those that also lack MFA protection.",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":949,"content":950},{},[951],{"nodeType":247,"value":952,"marks":953,"data":954},"Check your SSO coverage",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":956,"content":957},{},[958,962,967],{"nodeType":247,"value":959,"marks":960,"data":961},"On the Dashboard, you can also start to see your ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":963,"marks":964,"data":966},"SSO trends",[965],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":968,"marks":969,"data":970},". Use this section of the dashboard to see a breakdown of login methods for your accounts (SAML, OIDC, or non-SSO).",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":972,"content":976},{"target":973},{"sys":974},{"id":975,"type":282,"linkType":283},"6GbX5cV4wOerwFeqKKAolC",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":978,"content":979},{},[980,984,989,993,998,1002,1012],{"nodeType":247,"value":981,"marks":982,"data":983},"You can look at more granular information on the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":985,"marks":986,"data":988},"Accounts",[987],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":990,"marks":991,"data":992}," page by filtering by ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":994,"marks":995,"data":997},"Login method",[996],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":999,"marks":1000,"data":1001},". For example, you may wish to view accounts that have used both password and SAML login methods to identify local accounts on high-value apps that should be using SSO only — otherwise known as ",[],{},{"nodeType":353,"data":1003,"content":1007},{"target":1004},{"sys":1005},{"id":1006,"type":282,"linkType":283},"174u87EYeKMKHzYYxBLlHO",[1008],{"nodeType":247,"value":1009,"marks":1010,"data":1011},"ghost logins",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":364,"marks":1013,"data":1014},[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":1016,"content":1020},{"target":1017},{"sys":1018},{"id":1019,"type":282,"linkType":283},"68Sfs2MmpkdISb4rnoTCzW",[],{"nodeType":457,"data":1022,"content":1023},{},[1024],{"nodeType":247,"value":1025,"marks":1026,"data":1027},"Review patterns in employee activity",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1029,"content":1030},{},[1031,1035,1040,1044,1049,1053,1057],{"nodeType":247,"value":1032,"marks":1033,"data":1034},"Using the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1036,"marks":1037,"data":1039},"Apps",[1038],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1041,"marks":1042,"data":1043},", ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1045,"marks":1046,"data":1048},"Employees",[1047],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1050,"marks":1051,"data":1052},", and ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":985,"marks":1054,"data":1056},[1055],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1058,"marks":1059,"data":1060}," pages, you can then get a sense of which apps employees are accessing, using which login methods, whether they’re registered for MFA (and which MFA methods are registered on the account), whether they’re using a password manager, and where there are account security issues such as weak, reused, or shared passwords.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1062,"content":1063},{},[1064,1069],{"nodeType":247,"value":1065,"marks":1066,"data":1068},"Tip:",[1067],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1070,"marks":1071,"data":1072}," Use the filters on these pages to zero in on issues of interest, such as password logins, account security findings, or weak MFA methods.",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":1074,"content":1075},{},[1076],{"nodeType":247,"value":1077,"marks":1078,"data":1079},"Put your security policies into practice",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1081,"content":1082},{},[1083],{"nodeType":247,"value":1084,"marks":1085,"data":1086},"Equipped with this context, now you’re ready to lay the foundation for remediation and blocking controls, putting your security policies into practice.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1088,"content":1089},{},[1090],{"nodeType":247,"value":1091,"marks":1092,"data":1093},"At this stage, we recommend that you:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":1095,"content":1096},{},[1097,1125,1135],{"nodeType":342,"data":1098,"content":1099},{},[1100],{"nodeType":252,"data":1101,"content":1102},{},[1103,1107,1112,1116,1121],{"nodeType":247,"value":1104,"marks":1105,"data":1106},"Set the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1108,"marks":1109,"data":1111},"Approval status",[1110],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1113,"marks":1114,"data":1115}," and ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1117,"marks":1118,"data":1120},"Sensitivity level",[1119],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1122,"marks":1123,"data":1124}," of your apps using the provided categories in Push.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1126,"content":1127},{},[1128],{"nodeType":252,"data":1129,"content":1130},{},[1131],{"nodeType":247,"value":1132,"marks":1133,"data":1134},"Create employee groups (which can be done manually or via API to match your existing directory groups) and assign employees to them based on department or job function.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1136,"content":1137},{},[1138],{"nodeType":252,"data":1139,"content":1140},{},[1141],{"nodeType":247,"value":1142,"marks":1143,"data":1144},"Create custom labels for apps as needed.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1146,"content":1147},{},[1148],{"nodeType":247,"value":1149,"marks":1150,"data":1151},"By adding this metadata, you’ll be able to use these classifications when configuring rules for how to apply your desired security controls.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":1153,"content":1157},{"target":1154},{"sys":1155},{"id":1156,"type":282,"linkType":283},"pCIPMrpBAWlmqFoKxTL8P",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":1159,"content":1160},{},[1161],{"nodeType":247,"value":1162,"marks":1163,"data":1164},"Before enabling end-user remediation and blocking controls, which we cover in the next section, you may also wish to let your employees know what they should expect to see in terms of self-remediation workflows or other employee-facing guidance in their browser.",[],{},{"nodeType":320,"data":1166,"content":1167},{},[],{"nodeType":243,"data":1169,"content":1170},{},[1171],{"nodeType":247,"value":1172,"marks":1173,"data":1174},"First 90 days: Remediate issues and arrive safely",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1176,"content":1177},{},[1178],{"nodeType":247,"value":1179,"marks":1180,"data":1181},"With your team prepared and your rifle well-oiled, you’re ready to pick off security issues like SSO password phishing; missing MFA; and use of unsanctioned apps.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1183,"content":1184},{},[1185],{"nodeType":247,"value":1186,"marks":1187,"data":1188},"Here’s what we recommend for your third month using Push:",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":1190,"content":1191},{},[1192],{"nodeType":247,"value":1193,"marks":1194,"data":1195},"Move security controls out of Monitor mode to Warn or Block",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1197,"content":1198},{},[1199,1203,1208,1212,1216,1219,1223,1227,1231,1235,1239,1242,1246],{"nodeType":247,"value":1200,"marks":1201,"data":1202},"Once you’ve informed your employees and curated your ignore list, you’re ready to move security controls such as ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1204,"marks":1205,"data":1207},"SSO password protection",[1206],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1209,"marks":1210,"data":1211}," into ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":517,"marks":1213,"data":1215},[1214],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":522,"marks":1217,"data":1218},[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":526,"marks":1220,"data":1222},[1221],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1224,"marks":1225,"data":1226}," mode. (If you have not already set the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":472,"marks":1228,"data":1230},[1229],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1232,"marks":1233,"data":1234}," control to ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":517,"marks":1236,"data":1238},[1237],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":522,"marks":1240,"data":1241},[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":526,"marks":1243,"data":1245},[1244],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1247,"marks":1248,"data":1249},", now is also a good time to do that.)",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1251,"content":1252},{},[1253,1256,1260],{"nodeType":247,"value":496,"marks":1254,"data":1255},[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":500,"marks":1257,"data":1259},[1258],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1261,"marks":1262,"data":1263}," page of the admin console:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":1265,"content":1266},{},[1267,1285,1295,1305],{"nodeType":342,"data":1268,"content":1269},{},[1270],{"nodeType":252,"data":1271,"content":1272},{},[1273,1277,1282],{"nodeType":247,"value":1274,"marks":1275,"data":1276},"Open the tile for the given control and update the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1278,"marks":1279,"data":1281},"Mode",[1280],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":364,"marks":1283,"data":1284},[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1286,"content":1287},{},[1288],{"nodeType":252,"data":1289,"content":1290},{},[1291],{"nodeType":247,"value":1292,"marks":1293,"data":1294},"Create a custom message that employees will see when the control is triggered.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1296,"content":1297},{},[1298],{"nodeType":252,"data":1299,"content":1300},{},[1301],{"nodeType":247,"value":1302,"marks":1303,"data":1304},"Save the configuration.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1306,"content":1307},{},[1308],{"nodeType":252,"data":1309,"content":1310},{},[1311],{"nodeType":247,"value":1312,"marks":1313,"data":1314},"If possible, we also recommend consuming the webhook events generated when these controls are triggered in your SIEM or other alerting platform so you have good visibility.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1316,"content":1317},{},[1318,1322,1326,1329,1334,1338,1343],{"nodeType":247,"value":1319,"marks":1320,"data":1321},"If you’ve found any malicious sites using the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":472,"marks":1323,"data":1325},[1324],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":522,"marks":1327,"data":1328},[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1330,"marks":1331,"data":1333},"Cloned login page detection",[1332],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1335,"marks":1336,"data":1337}," control, you may also wish to update your blocklist using the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1339,"marks":1340,"data":1342},"URL blocking",[1341],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1344,"marks":1345,"data":1346}," control. ",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":1348,"content":1349},{},[1350],{"nodeType":247,"value":1351,"marks":1352,"data":1353},"Implement banners to guide secure employee behavior",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1355,"content":1356},{},[1357,1361,1366,1370,1375,1378,1383,1386,1391,1395,1399,1403,1407,1411,1416],{"nodeType":247,"value":1358,"marks":1359,"data":1360},"Depending on your security goals, you may want to implement in-browser guidance for employees in the form of ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1362,"marks":1363,"data":1365},"App banners",[1364],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1367,"marks":1368,"data":1369},". You can configure a banner in ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1371,"marks":1372,"data":1374},"Inform",[1373],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1041,"marks":1376,"data":1377},[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1379,"marks":1380,"data":1382},"Acknowledge",[1381],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1041,"marks":1384,"data":1385},[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1387,"marks":1388,"data":1390},"Reason",[1389],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1392,"marks":1393,"data":1394},", or ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":526,"marks":1396,"data":1398},[1397],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1400,"marks":1401,"data":1402}," modes from the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":500,"marks":1404,"data":1406},[1405],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1408,"marks":1409,"data":1410}," page. Use the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1412,"marks":1413,"data":1415},"Rules",[1414],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1417,"marks":1418,"data":1419}," feature to specify which employees or employee groups should see a banner, and which apps to apply it to.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":1421,"content":1425},{"target":1422},{"sys":1423},{"id":1424,"type":282,"linkType":283},"2rVWMTYrjShEdrswkzobJe",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":1427,"content":1428},{},[1429],{"nodeType":247,"value":1430,"marks":1431,"data":1432},"Common use cases include:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":1434,"content":1435},{},[1436,1446,1456,1466,1476],{"nodeType":342,"data":1437,"content":1438},{},[1439],{"nodeType":252,"data":1440,"content":1441},{},[1442],{"nodeType":247,"value":1443,"marks":1444,"data":1445},"Blocking an app while you investigate a potential data breach.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1447,"content":1448},{},[1449],{"nodeType":252,"data":1450,"content":1451},{},[1452],{"nodeType":247,"value":1453,"marks":1454,"data":1455},"Blocking unapproved apps, such as a file-sharing service that’s not approved for storing sensitive information.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1457,"content":1458},{},[1459],{"nodeType":252,"data":1460,"content":1461},{},[1462],{"nodeType":247,"value":1463,"marks":1464,"data":1465},"Requiring employees to acknowledge your GenAI policy before using GenAI apps.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1467,"content":1468},{},[1469],{"nodeType":252,"data":1470,"content":1471},{},[1472],{"nodeType":247,"value":1473,"marks":1474,"data":1475},"Reminding employees to use SSO for SAML-enabled apps rather than a local account password.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1477,"content":1478},{},[1479],{"nodeType":252,"data":1480,"content":1481},{},[1482],{"nodeType":247,"value":1483,"marks":1484,"data":1485},"Asking employees not to use an app before it can be reviewed by the security team, for apps not yet in your inventory.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1487,"content":1488},{},[1489,1493,1497,1501],{"nodeType":247,"value":1065,"marks":1490,"data":1492},[1491],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1494,"marks":1495,"data":1496}," You can monitor employee engagement with app banners on the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":564,"marks":1498,"data":1500},[1499],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1502,"marks":1503,"data":1504}," page and send webhook events for when a banner is displayed or interacted with to your SIEM or SOAR.",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":1506,"content":1507},{},[1508],{"nodeType":247,"value":1509,"marks":1510,"data":1511},"Enforce MFA on high-value apps",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1513,"content":1514},{},[1515,1519,1524],{"nodeType":247,"value":1516,"marks":1517,"data":1518},"If you’ve identified accounts on important apps that lack MFA, you can prompt employees to add an MFA method using ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1520,"marks":1521,"data":1523},"MFA enforcement",[1522],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1525,"marks":1526,"data":1527},". This control uses an in-browser message to direct employees to register for MFA on apps where they lack it. This control is enabled on a per-app basis, so you can decide where you want to prompt for MFA registration.",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":1529,"content":1530},{},[1531,1556],{"nodeType":342,"data":1532,"content":1533},{},[1534],{"nodeType":252,"data":1535,"content":1536},{},[1537,1540,1544,1548,1552],{"nodeType":247,"value":496,"marks":1538,"data":1539},[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":500,"marks":1541,"data":1543},[1542],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1545,"marks":1546,"data":1547}," page, select the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1520,"marks":1549,"data":1551},[1550],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1553,"marks":1554,"data":1555}," tile.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1557,"content":1558},{},[1559],{"nodeType":252,"data":1560,"content":1561},{},[1562],{"nodeType":247,"value":1563,"marks":1564,"data":1565},"Customize the message to employees, if you like.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1567,"content":1568},{},[1569],{"nodeType":247,"value":1570,"marks":1571,"data":1572},"image",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":1574,"content":1575},{},[1576],{"nodeType":247,"value":1577,"marks":1578,"data":1579},"Send events to your SIEM or SOAR",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1581,"content":1582},{},[1583],{"nodeType":247,"value":1584,"marks":1585,"data":1586},"To stay informed about end-user activity, findings, and controls on the Push platform, we recommend consuming events important to your security strategy in your SIEM, SOAR, or other similar alerting or automation platform.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1588,"content":1589},{},[1590,1594,1598,1602,1610],{"nodeType":247,"value":1591,"marks":1592,"data":1593},"Use the ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":564,"marks":1595,"data":1597},[1596],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1599,"marks":1600,"data":1601}," page in the admin console to get familiar with the data structure of events, as well as the volume of events, and then review our ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":1603,"content":1605},{"uri":1604},"/help/audience/administrators/docs/getting-started/#api-and-webhooks",[1606],{"nodeType":247,"value":1607,"marks":1608,"data":1609},"REST API and webhooks documentation",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1611,"marks":1612,"data":1613}," for details on which entities, activities, control events, and audit logs you can consume.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":1615,"content":1619},{"target":1616},{"sys":1617},{"id":1618,"type":282,"linkType":283},"1oG13vQ3AGP5i6TD24dnjs",[],{"nodeType":320,"data":1621,"content":1622},{},[],{"nodeType":243,"data":1624,"content":1625},{},[1626],{"nodeType":247,"value":1627,"marks":1628,"data":1629},"Next: Chart your own course",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1631,"content":1632},{},[1633],{"nodeType":247,"value":1634,"marks":1635,"data":1636},"In your first 90 days and beyond, you can also begin creating custom workflows in your SIEM or SOAR platform to take Push’s browser and user activity telemetry and transform it into the triggers for solving specific problems in your environment.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1638,"content":1639},{},[1640],{"nodeType":247,"value":1641,"marks":1642,"data":1643},"Here are some ideas for what you can accomplish using Push’s REST API and webhooks:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":1645,"content":1646},{},[1647,1662,1677,1692,1707,1726,1741],{"nodeType":342,"data":1648,"content":1649},{},[1650],{"nodeType":252,"data":1651,"content":1652},{},[1653,1658],{"nodeType":247,"value":1654,"marks":1655,"data":1657},"Harden identities and reduce account compromise",[1656],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1659,"marks":1660,"data":1661},", such as alerting you when passwords are identified in public data breaches or when employees are using an unapproved app or when an SSO app is accessed via local 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opportunities.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1693,"content":1694},{},[1695],{"nodeType":252,"data":1696,"content":1697},{},[1698,1703],{"nodeType":247,"value":1699,"marks":1700,"data":1702},"Force-reset an IdP password",[1701],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1704,"marks":1705,"data":1706}," if Push finds a compromised password on an employee account.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1708,"content":1709},{},[1710],{"nodeType":252,"data":1711,"content":1712},{},[1713,1717,1722],{"nodeType":247,"value":1714,"marks":1715,"data":1716},"Automate a workflow showing you all the",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1718,"marks":1719,"data":1721}," accounts and apps used by an employee you’re offboarding",[1720],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1723,"marks":1724,"data":1725},", and their account login methods.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1727,"content":1728},{},[1729],{"nodeType":252,"data":1730,"content":1731},{},[1732,1737],{"nodeType":247,"value":1733,"marks":1734,"data":1736},"Automate a workflow to revoke licenses",[1735],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1738,"marks":1739,"data":1740}," on SaaS after a period of inactivity, saving money.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":1742,"content":1743},{},[1744],{"nodeType":252,"data":1745,"content":1746},{},[1747,1752],{"nodeType":247,"value":1748,"marks":1749,"data":1751},"Build an approved apps list",[1750],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1753,"marks":1754,"data":1755}," in your company wiki, synced from Push’s source of truth.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1757,"content":1758},{},[1759],{"nodeType":247,"value":1760,"marks":1761,"data":1762},"If you’ve made it this far, congratulations! You did not die of identity attacks.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":1764,"content":1768},{"target":1765},{"sys":1766},{"id":1767,"type":282,"linkType":283},"4B7JIz8Iy7kp83vWLEVgOw",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":1770,"content":1771},{},[1772],{"nodeType":247,"value":29,"marks":1773,"data":1774},[],{},{"entries":1776},{"inline":1777,"hyperlink":1778,"block":1802},[],[1779,1784,1788,1792,1798],{"sys":1780,"__typename":1781,"title":1782,"slug":1783},{"id":357},"BlogPosts","How AitM phishing kits evade detection","how-aitm-phishing-kits-evade-detection",{"sys":1785,"__typename":1781,"title":1786,"slug":1787},{"id":381},"Our design philosophy: Detecting what matters","our-design-philosophy-detecting-what-matters",{"sys":1789,"__typename":1781,"title":1790,"slug":1791},{"id":597},"Eliminate false positives with verified stolen credential detections using Push","verified-stolen-credential-detection",{"sys":1793,"__typename":1794,"title":1795,"slug":1796,"articleId":1797},{"id":683},"HelpArticle","How do I add a custom login domain in Push?","how-do-i-add-a-custom-login-domain-in-push",10120,{"sys":1799,"__typename":1781,"title":1800,"slug":1801},{"id":1006},"Ghost logins: When forgotten identities come back to haunt you","ghost-logins-when-forgotten-identities-come-back-to-haunt-you",[1803,1812,1818,1825,1832,1839,1846,1853,1860,1867,1875,1882],{"sys":1804,"__typename":1805,"title":1806,"caption":1807,"layoutMode":62,"file":1808},{"id":281},"Image","Oregon Trail river crossing screenshot","Image from the iconic 1980s Oregon Trail video game. 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All that sifting for a few grains of value. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1929,"content":1930},{},[1931],{"nodeType":247,"value":1932,"marks":1933,"data":1934},"If you’ve ever tried to make use of a TI feed on stolen credentials, you’ll know exactly how this feels. Yet the need to identify signal from noise is obvious. When it matters, it really matters. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1936,"content":1937},{},[1938],{"nodeType":247,"value":1939,"marks":1940,"data":1941},"While there’s an enormous volume of TI data available on stolen creds, data trustworthiness is much harder to establish. Are these creds still in use? Are they in use on company applications? And without trust in the data, it’s harder to take action.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":1943,"content":1947},{"target":1944},{"sys":1945},{"id":1946,"type":282,"linkType":283},"4unFZadFrWEQsiHsD3YAEo",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":1949,"content":1950},{},[1951],{"nodeType":247,"value":1952,"marks":1953,"data":1954},"We set out to solve this problem at Push and ended up flipping the script on conventional approaches to evaluating TI on stolen credentials. (Lay down your shovel, friend.)",[],{},{"nodeType":1956,"data":1957,"content":1958},"blockquote",{},[1959],{"nodeType":252,"data":1960,"content":1961},{},[1962,1966,1971],{"nodeType":247,"value":1963,"marks":1964,"data":1965},"With our latest release, Push takes TI on stolen credentials sourced from criminal forums and compares it to the actual credentials still being used across customer environments, ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1967,"marks":1968,"data":1970},"alerting on validated true positives only",[1969],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":622,"marks":1972,"data":1973},[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1975,"content":1976},{},[1977,1981,1989],{"nodeType":247,"value":1978,"marks":1979,"data":1980},"As of January 2025, you can also bring your own TI to the Push platform. Using the ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":1982,"content":1984},{"uri":1983},"https://pushsecurity.redoc.ly/rest-v1#tag/Stolen-credential-detection",[1985],{"nodeType":247,"value":1986,"marks":1987,"data":1988},"Push REST API",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":1990,"marks":1991,"data":1992},", you can share stolen credential reports you receive from your existing vendors and task the Push browser agent with finding the ones still in use by employees.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":1994,"content":1995},{},[1996],{"nodeType":247,"value":1997,"marks":1998,"data":1999},"Call it the “dirt in, gold out” model for TI feeds.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":2001,"content":2005},{"target":2002},{"sys":2003},{"id":2004,"type":282,"linkType":283},"5VtuerdMpP4U9yL7pjrb4P",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":2007,"content":2008},{},[2009],{"nodeType":247,"value":2010,"marks":2011,"data":2012},"In this article, we’ll cover some of the challenges with threat intel on stolen credentials, why the rise of infostealers has added urgency to determining the trustworthiness of this category of threat, and how Push’s approach of validating stolen credentials cuts through uncertainty. ",[],{},{"nodeType":320,"data":2014,"content":2015},{},[],{"nodeType":243,"data":2017,"content":2018},{},[2019],{"nodeType":247,"value":2020,"marks":2021,"data":2022},"Why actionable intel on creds is hard",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2024,"content":2025},{},[2026],{"nodeType":247,"value":2027,"marks":2028,"data":2029},"Both threat actors and security teams have ready access to information on stolen credentials, with obviously opposite goals. There is now a robust economy for this data, driven in part by both the success of attacks using stolen creds, and the SaaS-ification of business software. In the past, security teams could audit their Active Directory passwords. Today, many if not most corporate credentials are stored in apps that do not provide that level of visibility.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2031,"content":2032},{},[2033],{"nodeType":247,"value":2034,"marks":2035,"data":2036},"So when it comes to stolen credential TI, the challenge is not the availability of data — dozens of vendors already do the hard work of establishing presences in these forums in order to collect and disseminate information on credentials such as usernames, passwords, cookies, and API keys that have been stolen through data breaches, phishing attacks, infostealers, or other methods. ",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":2038,"content":2039},{},[2040],{"nodeType":247,"value":2041,"marks":2042,"data":2043},"Too much data, not enough context",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2045,"content":2046},{},[2047],{"nodeType":247,"value":2048,"marks":2049,"data":2050},"Rather, the difficulty is determining which information to act on. Finding the gold, in other words.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2052,"content":2053},{},[2054],{"nodeType":247,"value":2055,"marks":2056,"data":2057},"TI on stolen credentials often suffers from:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":2059,"content":2060},{},[2061,2076],{"nodeType":342,"data":2062,"content":2063},{},[2064],{"nodeType":252,"data":2065,"content":2066},{},[2067,2072],{"nodeType":247,"value":2068,"marks":2069,"data":2071},"Data overload:",[2070],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2073,"marks":2074,"data":2075}," The double bind of TI is especially evident here — once you know about a potential true positive, you feel obligated to investigate, yet the scale of the information and the high incidence of outdated or incomplete information can pose a risk of desensitizing the SOC or wasting dozens of hours of time investigating what turn out to be false positives, especially when that time could have been better spent on in-depth threat hunting.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2077,"content":2078},{},[2079],{"nodeType":252,"data":2080,"content":2081},{},[2082,2087],{"nodeType":247,"value":2083,"marks":2084,"data":2086},"Minimal context:",[2085],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2088,"marks":2089,"data":2090}," Intelligence is often incomplete or out of date. TI feeds may present stolen passwords as new breaches, but the data is actually a recycled combolist (aggregated list of lists) rather than a new incident. In some situations, infostealer threat intel can stem from a personal device that was compromised and once accessed corporate assets, but is no longer active or using that password. Then there are the false negatives, where you get an alert for stolen credentials on a core app following a breach, and the creds are no longer in use there — but they are still being used on a different high-value app. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":2092,"content":2096},{"target":2093},{"sys":2094},{"id":2095,"type":282,"linkType":283},"40ZWbzJFQLRjCAaFCA0YLS",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":2098,"content":2099},{},[2100],{"nodeType":247,"value":2101,"marks":2102,"data":2103},"Despite these challenges, there is still a strong case for incorporating TI on stolen creds into your cyber defense practice for one important reason: Attackers are increasingly using stolen credentials to compromise organizations.",[],{},{"nodeType":320,"data":2105,"content":2106},{},[],{"nodeType":243,"data":2108,"content":2109},{},[2110],{"nodeType":247,"value":2111,"marks":2112,"data":2113},"The commodification of stolen creds in the age of infostealers",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2115,"content":2116},{},[2117],{"nodeType":247,"value":2118,"marks":2119,"data":2120},"A few headline stats on how ubiquitous stolen credential exploitation has become:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":2122,"content":2123},{},[2124,2148,2170,2193,2229],{"nodeType":342,"data":2125,"content":2126},{},[2127],{"nodeType":252,"data":2128,"content":2129},{},[2130,2134,2144],{"nodeType":247,"value":2131,"marks":2132,"data":2133},"The ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2135,"content":2137},{"uri":2136},"https://www.verizon.com/business/en-gb/resources/reports/dbir/",[2138],{"nodeType":247,"value":2139,"marks":2140,"data":2143},"2024 Verizon DBIR",[2141],{"type":2142},"underline",{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2145,"marks":2146,"data":2147}," found that 79% of web application compromises were the result of breached credentials.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2149,"content":2150},{},[2151],{"nodeType":252,"data":2152,"content":2153},{},[2154,2157,2166],{"nodeType":247,"value":29,"marks":2155,"data":2156},[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2158,"content":2160},{"uri":2159},"https://www.ibm.com/reports/threat-intelligence",[2161],{"nodeType":247,"value":2162,"marks":2163,"data":2165},"Researchers at IBM",[2164],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2167,"marks":2168,"data":2169}," identified a 71% year-over-year increase in cyberattacks using stolen or compromised credentials. This jump made stolen creds the No. 1 source of initial access for cyberattacks in their study. They also found a 266% uptick in the last year in the use of infostealers — malware designed to capture passwords, cookies, and other credential data.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2171,"content":2172},{},[2173],{"nodeType":252,"data":2174,"content":2175},{},[2176,2180,2189],{"nodeType":247,"value":2177,"marks":2178,"data":2179},"Researchers at threat intelligence provider ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2181,"content":2183},{"uri":2182},"https://go.recordedfuture.com/hubfs/reports/ta-2024-0321.pdf",[2184],{"nodeType":247,"value":2185,"marks":2186,"data":2188},"Recorded Future",[2187],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2190,"marks":2191,"data":2192}," found a 135% increase last year in the number of harvested credentials among their data sources, and a 166% increase in credentials that included cookies, providing an easy way for attackers to bypass MFA protections.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2194,"content":2195},{},[2196],{"nodeType":252,"data":2197,"content":2198},{},[2199,2203,2212,2216,2225],{"nodeType":247,"value":2200,"marks":2201,"data":2202},"Meanwhile, Mandiant’s last two ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2204,"content":2206},{"uri":2205},"https://cloud.google.com/security/resources/m-trends",[2207],{"nodeType":247,"value":2208,"marks":2209,"data":2211},"M-Trends reports",[2210],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2213,"marks":2214,"data":2215}," found that stolen creds were the third and fourth most-used initial intrusion method of the last two years. Cisco Talos researchers found that the ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2217,"content":2219},{"uri":2218},"https://blog.talosintelligence.com/cisco-talos-2023-year-in-review/",[2220],{"nodeType":247,"value":2221,"marks":2222,"data":2224},"use of valid accounts",[2223],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2226,"marks":2227,"data":2228}," was the second-most common attack technique they observed last year.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2230,"content":2231},{},[2232],{"nodeType":252,"data":2233,"content":2234},{},[2235],{"nodeType":247,"value":2236,"marks":2237,"data":2238},"Push’s own review of the 25 most notable public identity-related breaches over the last year found that 23 were tied to stolen credentials.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2240,"content":2241},{},[2242],{"nodeType":247,"value":2243,"marks":2244,"data":2245},"What’s not immediately obvious from these statistics is that not only are credential-based attacks becoming more common, but they’re also becoming easier for attackers to execute.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2247,"content":2248},{},[2249,2252,2260],{"nodeType":247,"value":29,"marks":2250,"data":2251},[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2253,"content":2254},{"uri":2159},[2255],{"nodeType":247,"value":2256,"marks":2257,"data":2259},"IBM X-Force researchers",[2258],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2261,"marks":2262,"data":2263}," have found that credentials for cloud accounts account for 90% of all cloud assets for sale on the dark web, making them readily accessible. Price tags can be as low as $10.",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":2265,"content":2266},{},[2267],{"nodeType":247,"value":2268,"marks":2269,"data":2270},"The rise of infostealers has supercharged the stolen credential marketplace",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2272,"content":2273},{},[2274,2278,2287],{"nodeType":247,"value":2275,"marks":2276,"data":2277},"One category of threat — infostealer malware — has emerged as an especially successful avenue of compromise. While infostealers aren’t new, they have developed alongside what is now a robust economy for stolen credentials (think: dedicated Telegram channels advertising stolen data from the most popular infostealers), making them a fruitful option for attackers. For a deeper dive on the rise of infostealers, see our ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2279,"content":2281},{"uri":2280},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/what-the-rise-of-infostealers-says-about-identity-attacks/",[2282],{"nodeType":247,"value":2283,"marks":2284,"data":2286},"previous article",[2285],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":364,"marks":2288,"data":2289},[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2291,"content":2292},{},[2293],{"nodeType":247,"value":2294,"marks":2295,"data":2296},"Once attackers gain possession of stolen creds, they have plenty of soft targets. For organizations with a large amount of SaaS — a percentage of which will always be unmanaged shadow IT or freemium — the risk is heightened because all attackers need to do is log in to potentially hundreds of services, dump the data they find (including additional creds in some cases), and profit. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2298,"content":2299},{},[2300,2304,2314],{"nodeType":247,"value":2301,"marks":2302,"data":2303},"In other words, the average attack path for SaaS is shorter and occurs in-app, often using legitimate workflows, making it therefore harder to detect than traditional network exploits. We discuss this phenomenon in our ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2305,"content":2307},{"uri":2306},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/shifting-detection-left-for-more-effective-itdr/",[2308],{"nodeType":247,"value":2309,"marks":2310,"data":2313},"shifting detection left",[2311,2312],{"type":2142},{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2315,"marks":2316,"data":2317}," article.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2319,"content":2320},{},[2321],{"nodeType":247,"value":2322,"marks":2323,"data":2324},"Our take: We haven’t yet seen the peak of identity attacks that leverage compromised credentials. The opportunities for attackers are too numerous, and front-line defenses like MFA are still not widely enough enforced, particularly on unmanaged apps used for work.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2326,"content":2327},{},[2328,2332,2341],{"nodeType":247,"value":2329,"marks":2330,"data":2331},"Push Security’s ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2333,"content":2335},{"uri":2334},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/how-many-vulnerable-identities-do-you-have/",[2336],{"nodeType":247,"value":2337,"marks":2338,"data":2340},"own research",[2339],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2342,"marks":2343,"data":2344}," has found that 37% of corporate identities are using passwords with no MFA. For attackers in possession of stolen creds, these are easy marks.",[],{},{"nodeType":320,"data":2346,"content":2347},{},[],{"nodeType":243,"data":2349,"content":2350},{},[2351],{"nodeType":247,"value":2352,"marks":2353,"data":2354},"How Push detects stolen creds with high confidence",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2356,"content":2357},{},[2358],{"nodeType":247,"value":2359,"marks":2360,"data":2361},"Now let’s take a look at how Push’s approach to this problem is different.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2363,"content":2364},{},[2365],{"nodeType":247,"value":2366,"marks":2367,"data":2368},"If you’re not familiar with the Push platform, a bit of context will be useful here: Push uses a browser agent deployed to employee browsers (we support all major browsers) to prevent, detect, and block identity attacks. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2370,"content":2371},{},[2372,2376,2385,2389,2398],{"nodeType":247,"value":2373,"marks":2374,"data":2375},"In addition to enforcing ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2377,"content":2379},{"uri":2378},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/introducing-set-and-forget-controls-that-stop-real-world-identity-attacks/",[2380],{"nodeType":247,"value":2381,"marks":2382,"data":2384},"security controls",[2383],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2386,"marks":2387,"data":2388}," in the browser, Push also assesses the strength of end-user passwords by ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2390,"content":2392},{"uri":2391},"https://pushsecurity.com/help/10065#start",[2393],{"nodeType":247,"value":2394,"marks":2395,"data":2397},"creating and analyzing",[2396],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2399,"marks":2400,"data":2401}," a truncated, salted SHA256 hash of the password for a given account. This is called a password fingerprint. These k-anonymized fingerprints are never seen by Push’s back-end and exist only in local browser extension storage.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2403,"content":2404},{},[2405],{"nodeType":247,"value":2406,"marks":2407,"data":2408},"This approach gives Push a directly observable source of truth for corporate credentials, and that data point turns out to be the key to flipping the script on how threat intelligence on stolen credentials is typically evaluated.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2410,"content":2411},{},[2412],{"nodeType":247,"value":2413,"marks":2414,"data":2415},"In the past, evaluating TI on stolen creds meant performing traditional intelligence assessments, such as confidence level based on factors like the intel source and whether the data was still current. Only after determining whether the information was high-confidence could you take action.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2417,"content":2418},{},[2419,2423,2431],{"nodeType":247,"value":2420,"marks":2421,"data":2422},"It’s worth noting, too, that the age of TI alone is not enough of an indicator to determine whether to take action. With the ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2424,"content":2426},{"uri":2425},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/snowflake-retro/",[2427],{"nodeType":247,"value":2428,"marks":2429,"data":2430},"Snowflake breach earlier this year",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2432,"marks":2433,"data":2434},", we saw how even older credentials posed a threat of account takeover where these creds were still in use. In the case of Snowflake, the attacker used credentials sourced from historical infostealer campaigns, some dating as far back as 2020.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":2436,"content":2440},{"target":2437},{"sys":2438},{"id":2439,"type":282,"linkType":283},"2lSZ7HbZfLmSFXneCnVJzY",[],{"nodeType":457,"data":2442,"content":2443},{},[2444],{"nodeType":247,"value":2445,"marks":2446,"data":2447},"Forget about time-consuming manual TI validation and get straight to the true positives",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2449,"content":2450},{},[2451],{"nodeType":247,"value":2452,"marks":2453,"data":2454},"With Push, the platform now can analyze threat intelligence on stolen credentials and alert when there’s a validated match among current credentials in use in your environment. This method works regardless of the source of the data or its age. This method also finds the needles in the haystack — situations where threat intel flags a stolen credential on one app, but that credential is also in use on several other apps. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":2456,"content":2460},{"target":2457},{"sys":2458},{"id":2459,"type":282,"linkType":283},"7GSFasHfHb3UgpgF8pZ2N2",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":2462,"content":2463},{},[2464],{"nodeType":247,"value":2465,"marks":2466,"data":2467},"Here’s how it works:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":2469,"content":2470},{},[2471,2491,2501,2511,2521],{"nodeType":342,"data":2472,"content":2473},{},[2474],{"nodeType":252,"data":2475,"content":2476},{},[2477,2481,2488],{"nodeType":247,"value":2478,"marks":2479,"data":2480},"Push receives TI on stolen credentials from vendor feeds. Use the feeds that Push supplies (at no additional cost for Push customers), or, additionally, bring your own TI by supplying stolen credential reports via the ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2482,"content":2484},{"uri":2483},"https://pushsecurity.redoc.ly/rest-v1#operation/post-controls-stolenCredentials",[2485],{"nodeType":247,"value":1986,"marks":2486,"data":2487},[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":622,"marks":2489,"data":2490},[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2492,"content":2493},{},[2494],{"nodeType":252,"data":2495,"content":2496},{},[2497],{"nodeType":247,"value":2498,"marks":2499,"data":2500},"For each customer environment, Push checks for customer domains in the data set.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2502,"content":2503},{},[2504],{"nodeType":252,"data":2505,"content":2506},{},[2507],{"nodeType":247,"value":2508,"marks":2509,"data":2510},"When suspected stolen creds for a customer environment are present, Push hashes and salts the passwords and then sends those fingerprints to the relevant browser agents for comparison. ",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2512,"content":2513},{},[2514],{"nodeType":252,"data":2515,"content":2516},{},[2517],{"nodeType":247,"value":2518,"marks":2519,"data":2520},"If the stolen credential fingerprint matches a known credential fingerprint observed to be in use by the Push browser agent, the platform returns a validated true positive alert. Note that Push can alert on a validated true positive regardless of which platform the TI source indicated was the source of the stolen cred, allowing you to find those compromised credentials in use across any of your apps.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2522,"content":2523},{},[2524],{"nodeType":252,"data":2525,"content":2526},{},[2527],{"nodeType":247,"value":2528,"marks":2529,"data":2530},"You can choose to receive alerts for this detection via webhook, ChatOps notification, or in the Push admin console.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2532,"content":2533},{},[2534],{"nodeType":247,"value":2535,"marks":2536,"data":2537},"From there, security teams can take action to reset passwords, identify potentially compromised devices, or perform other investigations.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2539,"content":2540},{},[2541],{"nodeType":247,"value":2542,"marks":2543,"data":2544},"By comparing all possible matches to only those credentials that are still in use, Push eliminates time-consuming validation exercises. In essence, the provenance of the intel no longer matters; only the true positives do.",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":2546,"content":2547},{},[2548],{"nodeType":247,"value":2549,"marks":2550,"data":2551},"Bring your own TI",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2553,"content":2554},{},[2555],{"nodeType":247,"value":2556,"marks":2557,"data":2558},"With verified stolen credential detection, you can also extract a lot more value from your existing threat intelligence feeds by sharing stolen creds reports with the Push platform via API. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2560,"content":2561},{},[2562],{"nodeType":247,"value":2563,"marks":2564,"data":2565},"This allows Push to perform the same checks to compare the reports to observed password fingerprints and flag only the true positives — eliminating the time-consuming work of manual triage, investigation, and end-user follow-up for your security team.",[],{},{"nodeType":320,"data":2567,"content":2568},{},[],{"nodeType":243,"data":2570,"content":2571},{},[2572],{"nodeType":247,"value":2573,"marks":2574,"data":2575},"Try Push for yourself",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2577,"content":2578},{},[2579,2583,2592],{"nodeType":247,"value":2580,"marks":2581,"data":2582},"The validated stolen credential detections feature is available at no additional cost for all Push customers. If you’d like to explore the platform yourself, ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2584,"content":2586},{"uri":2585},"https://pushsecurity.com/demo/",[2587],{"nodeType":247,"value":2588,"marks":2589,"data":2591},"request a demo",[2590],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2593,"marks":2594,"data":2595},". ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":2597,"content":2601},{"target":2598},{"sys":2599},{"id":2600,"type":282,"linkType":283},"3tqVk7Vr7pYLOEVukIJM2g",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":2603,"content":2604},{},[2605],{"nodeType":247,"value":29,"marks":2606,"data":2607},[],{},"Push now compares user passwords with TI feeds to alert you when valid credentials are available on the clearweb and darkweb.","2024-12-03T00:00:00.000Z",{"items":2611},[2612,2616],{"sys":2613,"name":2615},{"id":2614},"5jk0kqjSdSK2L0YiistQjY","Release notes",{"sys":2617,"name":2619},{"id":2618},"4ksQNCFeBf8H4QIORqpRLw","Detection & response",{"items":2621},[2622],{"fullName":232,"firstName":233,"jobTitle":234,"profilePicture":2623},{"url":236},{"__typename":1781,"sys":2625,"content":2627,"title":3457,"synopsis":3458,"hashTags":62,"publishedDate":3459,"slug":3460,"tagsCollection":3461,"authorsCollection":3469},{"id":2626},"4Bc6qX9kURetHcK7nkS8on",{"json":2628},{"nodeType":239,"data":2629,"content":2630},{},[2631,2638,2645,2652,2658,2666,2673,2679,2686,2692,2699,2707,2714,2720,2727,2760,2767,2774,2807,2815,2822,2830,2838,2845,2852,2872,2879,2886,2893,2901,2908,2915,2948,2955,3008,3015,3022,3030,3037,3044,3051,3059,3066,3089,3096,3144,3151,3157,3164,3207,3214,3222,3229,3236,3269,3277,3284,3290,3297,3303,3310,3316,3323,3410,3417,3425,3432,3450],{"nodeType":252,"data":2632,"content":2633},{},[2634],{"nodeType":247,"value":2635,"marks":2636,"data":2637},"As an industry, we’ve been conditioned to think about threat detection and response as something that happens post-compromise. Best practice has formed around resources like the Cyber Kill Chain and the MITRE ATT&CK Framework which focus on detecting indicators of an attacker presence on your network, and their behaviors and actions as they move through it.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2639,"content":2640},{},[2641],{"nodeType":247,"value":2642,"marks":2643,"data":2644},"But with the shift to identity attacks, where attackers look to take over accounts on internet-facing apps and services, relying on an assumed compromise approach to detection is becoming less reliable. The most significant breaches of the last 12-18 months have been the result of browser-based attacks where an attacker has taken over an account, exfiltrated data… and that’s it. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2646,"content":2647},{},[2648],{"nodeType":247,"value":2649,"marks":2650,"data":2651},"This change means that the typical methods of post-compromise detection and response become much less viable. So, we’re going to talk a bit about what’s changed, why controls are failing, and what we’re doing here at Push to address the detection gaps. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":2653,"content":2657},{"target":2654},{"sys":2655},{"id":2656,"type":282,"linkType":283},"4179AY8ZEIJ3Ce9jszn4fA",[],{"nodeType":243,"data":2659,"content":2660},{},[2661],{"nodeType":247,"value":2662,"marks":2663,"data":2665},"The good old days",[2664],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2667,"content":2668},{},[2669],{"nodeType":247,"value":2670,"marks":2671,"data":2672},"Over the previous decade the typical attack paths, and the controls that have formed around it, have become very familiar to SecOps teams. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":2674,"content":2678},{"target":2675},{"sys":2676},{"id":2677,"type":282,"linkType":283},"4AOzwBGuNkXXogyqy46ki5",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":2680,"content":2681},{},[2682],{"nodeType":247,"value":2683,"marks":2684,"data":2685},"Even with the more recent transition to enterprise cloud and hybrid networking, the broad offensive logic of “land and expand” remains. This has seen the typical view of a network-based attack path simply expand to add first enterprise cloud, and then SaaS to the picture. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":2687,"content":2691},{"target":2688},{"sys":2689},{"id":2690,"type":282,"linkType":283},"2J3s38YOVcMuJuTdryhERA",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":2693,"content":2694},{},[2695],{"nodeType":247,"value":2696,"marks":2697,"data":2698},"And while this sort of attack path is theoretically possible, what happens in reality looks quite different. ",[],{},{"nodeType":243,"data":2700,"content":2701},{},[2702],{"nodeType":247,"value":2703,"marks":2704,"data":2706},"The new world",[2705],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2708,"content":2709},{},[2710],{"nodeType":247,"value":2711,"marks":2712,"data":2713},"Instead of needing to progress through the network, moving laterally, elevating privileges, etc. modern account takeover tends to take a much more direct approach. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":2715,"content":2719},{"target":2716},{"sys":2717},{"id":2718,"type":282,"linkType":283},"6wIzMu3jBhaas9jtpV48bz",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":2721,"content":2722},{},[2723],{"nodeType":247,"value":2724,"marks":2725,"data":2726},"It’s a common misconception that SaaS compromise typically comes after the traditional attack chain (a myth largely promoted by old-school consultancy providers, MSSPs, and managed SOC providers). There’s no need for an attacker looking to take over a SaaS account to target the network first – and many organizations today simply no longer have a network in the conventional sense.  ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2728,"content":2729},{},[2730,2734,2743,2747,2756],{"nodeType":247,"value":2731,"marks":2732,"data":2733},"This isn’t to say that there aren’t examples of longer SaaS compromises involving lateral movement from SaaS to SaaS, or SaaS to cloud (",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2735,"content":2737},{"uri":2736},"https://github.com/pushsecurity/saas-attacks",[2738],{"nodeType":247,"value":2739,"marks":2740,"data":2742},"we created a whole attack matrix demonstrating the art of the possible here",[2741],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2744,"marks":2745,"data":2746},"). Equally, there are examples of very short and direct attacks in enterprise cloud environments leading to ransomware deployment (for example, ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2748,"content":2750},{"uri":2749},"https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/mgm-casinos-esxi-servers-allegedly-encrypted-in-ransomware-attack/",[2751],{"nodeType":247,"value":2752,"marks":2753,"data":2755},"Scattered Spider turning an initial account takeover in Okta into a full-scale VMware ESXi ransomware compromise",[2754],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2757,"marks":2758,"data":2759},"). ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2761,"content":2762},{},[2763],{"nodeType":247,"value":2764,"marks":2765,"data":2766},"But statistically, the average network or enterprise cloud attack involves much more complex lateral movement, privilege escalation, and defense evasion than the average SaaS attack path. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2768,"content":2769},{},[2770],{"nodeType":247,"value":2771,"marks":2772,"data":2773},"The Snowflake attack path is a useful case study here: ",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":2775,"content":2776},{},[2777,2787,2797],{"nodeType":342,"data":2778,"content":2779},{},[2780],{"nodeType":252,"data":2781,"content":2782},{},[2783],{"nodeType":247,"value":2784,"marks":2785,"data":2786},"Attackers logged into the Snowflake tenant of ~165 organizations using stolen credentials to access user accounts via the web-based ‘SnowSight’ portal. ",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2788,"content":2789},{},[2790],{"nodeType":252,"data":2791,"content":2792},{},[2793],{"nodeType":247,"value":2794,"marks":2795,"data":2796},"To take advantage of the many exposed accounts, the attacker created a utility performing account takeover and recon at-scale. ",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2798,"content":2799},{},[2800],{"nodeType":252,"data":2801,"content":2802},{},[2803],{"nodeType":247,"value":2804,"marks":2805,"data":2806},"The attack finished with the attacker executing the same set of SQL commands across customer instances to stage and exfiltrate data. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2808,"content":2809},{},[2810],{"nodeType":247,"value":2811,"marks":2812,"data":2814},"And that’s it. ",[2813],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2816,"content":2817},{},[2818],{"nodeType":247,"value":2819,"marks":2820,"data":2821},"Since these attacks happen in-app, to be able to detect and intercept them you’d need deep app-level telemetry, and probably the ability to automate any containment and response activities. But unfortunately…",[],{},{"nodeType":243,"data":2823,"content":2824},{},[2825],{"nodeType":247,"value":2826,"marks":2827,"data":2829},"Detecting and responding after account takeover is really, really difficult",[2828],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":457,"data":2831,"content":2832},{},[2833],{"nodeType":247,"value":2834,"marks":2835,"data":2837},"Limited log data ",[2836],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2839,"content":2840},{},[2841],{"nodeType":247,"value":2842,"marks":2843,"data":2844},"The first challenge is that in-app malicious activity is mostly indistinguishable from legitimate user behavior. Even mass data exfiltration might appear legitimate depending on what the app is used for!",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2846,"content":2847},{},[2848],{"nodeType":247,"value":2849,"marks":2850,"data":2851},"To meaningfully detect malicious activity in-app, for starters you would need visibility of user behavior and actions. Unfortunately, you don’t have this. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2853,"content":2854},{},[2855,2859,2868],{"nodeType":247,"value":2856,"marks":2857,"data":2858},"We’ve previously discussed in detail why ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":2860,"content":2862},{"uri":2861},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/the-web-proxy-is-dead-long-live-the-browser-extension/",[2863],{"nodeType":247,"value":2864,"marks":2865,"data":2867},"log sources like network (web proxy), IdP, and app logs fall short",[2866],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2869,"marks":2870,"data":2871}," when it comes to identity attacks, but the TL;DR is that most applications provide extremely limited security logging (if they provide it at all). ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2873,"content":2874},{},[2875],{"nodeType":247,"value":2876,"marks":2877,"data":2878},"When logs are available, you’re limited to the events that the third-party deems suitable to log. Out of the 100 most popular apps we see across our customers, and perhaps the few dozen or so that are security critical, only a small handful provide any useful logging. So extremely risky actions, like cloning a private GitHub repo, or downloading SharePoint files via ‘open in app’ or file syncing, don’t generate any logs at all. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2880,"content":2881},{},[2882],{"nodeType":247,"value":2883,"marks":2884,"data":2885},"Further, the lack of out-of-the-box connectors for many apps means that complex custom architectures are often required for ingestion.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2887,"content":2888},{},[2889],{"nodeType":247,"value":2890,"marks":2891,"data":2892},"So, even if logs are available and you’re able to ingest them into your SIEM, there’s no guarantee that the telemetry available will contribute to any meaningful detection of malicious activity. ",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":2894,"content":2895},{},[2896],{"nodeType":247,"value":2897,"marks":2898,"data":2900},"Limited response capabilities",[2899],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2902,"content":2903},{},[2904],{"nodeType":247,"value":2905,"marks":2906,"data":2907},"By some miracle, you’ve detected an account takeover. Now what?",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2909,"content":2910},{},[2911],{"nodeType":247,"value":2912,"marks":2913,"data":2914},"The ability to respond to an attack is dictated by the controls that are available to the security team. Unfortunately:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":2916,"content":2917},{},[2918,2928,2938],{"nodeType":342,"data":2919,"content":2920},{},[2921],{"nodeType":252,"data":2922,"content":2923},{},[2924],{"nodeType":247,"value":2925,"marks":2926,"data":2927},"Depending on the app and how it was adopted, there’s no guarantee that you have admin rights. ",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2929,"content":2930},{},[2931],{"nodeType":252,"data":2932,"content":2933},{},[2934],{"nodeType":247,"value":2935,"marks":2936,"data":2937},"It’s not guaranteed that admins will have the required security features available to them, like forcing a logout on a session or disabling an account (you may not even know who the users and admins are within your organization, particularly if it was self-adopted by a specific team). ",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2939,"content":2940},{},[2941],{"nodeType":252,"data":2942,"content":2943},{},[2944],{"nodeType":247,"value":2945,"marks":2946,"data":2947},"Response probably requires that you log into the app and perform these actions in the admin interface (rather than being something you can orchestrate via SIEM workflow or API).",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":2949,"content":2950},{},[2951],{"nodeType":247,"value":2952,"marks":2953,"data":2954},"So at the point that the SecOps team is engaged, the team needs to be able to respond by eradicating the attacker’s access and closing the vulnerabilities exploited to prevent re-entry. To do this, the team needs to be able to identify, for example:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":2956,"content":2957},{},[2958,2968,2978,2988,2998],{"nodeType":342,"data":2959,"content":2960},{},[2961],{"nodeType":252,"data":2962,"content":2963},{},[2964],{"nodeType":247,"value":2965,"marks":2966,"data":2967},"How the attacker gained access to the account",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2969,"content":2970},{},[2971],{"nodeType":252,"data":2972,"content":2973},{},[2974],{"nodeType":247,"value":2975,"marks":2976,"data":2977},"What the attacker did using the compromised account",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2979,"content":2980},{},[2981],{"nodeType":252,"data":2982,"content":2983},{},[2984],{"nodeType":247,"value":2985,"marks":2986,"data":2987},"Whether any alternative access methods were established (e.g. backup emails, API keys, or OAuth integrations)",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2989,"content":2990},{},[2991],{"nodeType":252,"data":2992,"content":2993},{},[2994],{"nodeType":247,"value":2995,"marks":2996,"data":2997},"Where the attacker could have laterally moved to using the account (based on the integrations and permissions of the identity)",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":2999,"content":3000},{},[3001],{"nodeType":252,"data":3002,"content":3003},{},[3004],{"nodeType":247,"value":3005,"marks":3006,"data":3007},"Other accounts the attacker could also access using the same credentials",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3009,"content":3010},{},[3011],{"nodeType":247,"value":3012,"marks":3013,"data":3014},"Given the limited tools available and the probable lack of app-specific knowledge (you can’t be an expert in every app!), by the time you’ve managed to respond, the attacker has probably already sailed off into the sunset with all of the data they can lay their hands on. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3016,"content":3017},{},[3018],{"nodeType":247,"value":3019,"marks":3020,"data":3021},"Clearly, post-compromise detection and response isn’t really a viable option – you’re basically entering full response and recovery mode at this point. ",[],{},{"nodeType":243,"data":3023,"content":3024},{},[3025],{"nodeType":247,"value":3026,"marks":3027,"data":3029},"Shifting detection left",[3028],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3031,"content":3032},{},[3033],{"nodeType":247,"value":3034,"marks":3035,"data":3036},"If you can’t reasonably detect and respond to post-compromise activity, it makes detecting and blocking initial access much more important. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3038,"content":3039},{},[3040],{"nodeType":247,"value":3041,"marks":3042,"data":3043},"Again, it seems obvious, but it’s yet another notion that’s fallen under the radar – despite the trendiness of ‘shifting left’ in other areas like software development and vulnerability management. Partly because as we’ve discussed, post-compromise detection and response has been the norm for so long. But also because we’ve accepted the status quo of the (somewhat disappointing) preventative controls that are available. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3045,"content":3046},{},[3047],{"nodeType":247,"value":3048,"marks":3049,"data":3050},"First, let’s isolate the techniques and steps that attackers typically rely on for account takeover. ",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":3052,"content":3053},{},[3054],{"nodeType":247,"value":3055,"marks":3056,"data":3058},"Methods of account takeover",[3057],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3060,"content":3061},{},[3062],{"nodeType":247,"value":3063,"marks":3064,"data":3065},"To be able to hijack an account, an attacker needs to possess one of two things:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":3067,"content":3068},{},[3069,3079],{"nodeType":342,"data":3070,"content":3071},{},[3072],{"nodeType":252,"data":3073,"content":3074},{},[3075],{"nodeType":247,"value":3076,"marks":3077,"data":3078},"Authentication material e.g. a username and password, with a login portal URL.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3080,"content":3081},{},[3082],{"nodeType":252,"data":3083,"content":3084},{},[3085],{"nodeType":247,"value":3086,"marks":3087,"data":3088},"Session material e.g. session cookies. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3090,"content":3091},{},[3092],{"nodeType":247,"value":3093,"marks":3094,"data":3095},"There are three main ways that an attacker can hijack an account by acquiring (or generating) these materials: Phishing, infostealers, and credential stuffing. ",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":3097,"content":3098},{},[3099,3114,3129],{"nodeType":342,"data":3100,"content":3101},{},[3102],{"nodeType":252,"data":3103,"content":3104},{},[3105,3110],{"nodeType":247,"value":3106,"marks":3107,"data":3109},"Phishing:",[3108],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3111,"marks":3112,"data":3113}," Stealing valid authentication and session material from victims, including usernames, passwords, and session cookies (if AitM or BitM), for a specific site or app.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3115,"content":3116},{},[3117],{"nodeType":252,"data":3118,"content":3119},{},[3120,3125],{"nodeType":247,"value":3121,"marks":3122,"data":3124},"Infostealers:",[3123],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3126,"marks":3127,"data":3128}," Stealing valid authentication and session material from the victim’s web browsers for all apps that the user has signed into, as well as desktop information from the device.",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3130,"content":3131},{},[3132],{"nodeType":252,"data":3133,"content":3134},{},[3135,3140],{"nodeType":247,"value":3136,"marks":3137,"data":3139},"Credential stuffing: ",[3138],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3141,"marks":3142,"data":3143},"Using previously breached authentication or session material in data breach dumps, or taking advantage of weak or guessable passwords (as a result of password reuse).",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3145,"content":3146},{},[3147],{"nodeType":247,"value":3148,"marks":3149,"data":3150},"Once this information has been acquired, the attack path follows a similar journey regardless of the initial attack technique, ending in the attacker initiating a session in their own browser. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":3152,"content":3156},{"target":3153},{"sys":3154},{"id":3155,"type":282,"linkType":283},"7CJT84yPsiUaUO4Mfb6oFd",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":3158,"content":3159},{},[3160],{"nodeType":247,"value":3161,"marks":3162,"data":3163},"Clearly, there are a number of steps here that involve user behaviors/actions that could in theory be detected with the right visibility:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":3165,"content":3166},{},[3167,3177,3187,3197],{"nodeType":342,"data":3168,"content":3169},{},[3170],{"nodeType":252,"data":3171,"content":3172},{},[3173],{"nodeType":247,"value":3174,"marks":3175,"data":3176},"The victim being sent and accessing a malicious link, or downloading a malicious file",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3178,"content":3179},{},[3180],{"nodeType":252,"data":3181,"content":3182},{},[3183],{"nodeType":247,"value":3184,"marks":3185,"data":3186},"The victim loading a malicious webpage",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3188,"content":3189},{},[3190],{"nodeType":252,"data":3191,"content":3192},{},[3193],{"nodeType":247,"value":3194,"marks":3195,"data":3196},"The victim interacting with a malicious webpage, such as entering their credentials",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3198,"content":3199},{},[3200],{"nodeType":252,"data":3201,"content":3202},{},[3203],{"nodeType":247,"value":3204,"marks":3205,"data":3206},"(If an infostealer attack) The victim executing malware on their device",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3208,"content":3209},{},[3210],{"nodeType":247,"value":3211,"marks":3212,"data":3213},"Finally, the attacker must also access the stolen account from their own device/browser.",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":3215,"content":3216},{},[3217],{"nodeType":247,"value":3218,"marks":3219,"data":3221},"Existing controls are falling short",[3220],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3223,"content":3224},{},[3225],{"nodeType":247,"value":3226,"marks":3227,"data":3228},"So, now we know what these attacks look like, how do you feasibly detect and block them? ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3230,"content":3231},{},[3232],{"nodeType":247,"value":3233,"marks":3234,"data":3235},"The vast majority of identity attacks take place entirely over the internet. These attacks don’t involve traditional network and endpoint-based techniques, and therefore don’t run into many of your existing perimeter controls. Infostealer attacks are the exception in that they do involve an endpoint compromise (and therefore come up against EDR), but attackers are continually finding new bypass techniques, or are targeting unmanaged devices that are not protected by EDR. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3237,"content":3238},{},[3239,3243,3252,3256,3265],{"nodeType":247,"value":3240,"marks":3241,"data":3242},"This leaves us in the hands of TI-driven blocklists and SWG/email controls that identify and block malicious content. However, these controls are largely based on ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":3244,"content":3246},{"uri":3245},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/our-design-philosophy-detecting-what-matters/",[3247],{"nodeType":247,"value":3248,"marks":3249,"data":3251},"indicators like domain names, URLs, and IPs",[3250],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3253,"marks":3254,"data":3255}," which are easy for attackers to change (and therefore bypass). Where pages and downloads are analyzed, ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":3257,"content":3259},{"uri":3258},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/how-aitm-phishing-kits-evade-detection/",[3260],{"nodeType":247,"value":3261,"marks":3262,"data":3264},"attackers are routinely implementing obfuscation measures to defeat more advanced dynamic controls",[3263],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3266,"marks":3267,"data":3268}," with a lot of success, or using techniques like HTML smuggling to bypass download scanning tools. ",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":3270,"content":3271},{},[3272],{"nodeType":247,"value":3273,"marks":3274,"data":3276},"Detecting and responding to account takeover with Push",[3275],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3278,"content":3279},{},[3280],{"nodeType":247,"value":3281,"marks":3282,"data":3283},"But, Push’s vantage point in the browser gives us a very different perspective. Because in the browser, you have much better visibility of the rendered web page (meaning it's much harder to disguise malicious content). You also aren’t restricted to email, and can intercept a user loading a malicious page whatever it’s source. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":3285,"content":3289},{"target":3286},{"sys":3287},{"id":3288,"type":282,"linkType":283},"4JpFRHGRGEbCb1hNF0CGlE",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":3291,"content":3292},{},[3293],{"nodeType":247,"value":3294,"marks":3295,"data":3296},"So, let’s compare the typical web-based controls that organizations rely on against what’s possible using Push’s browser-based solution. We’ll put EDR to one side here and focus on a typical phishing attack, since the majority of the attack path happens over the internet (and the attacker has to return to the internet to access the app/account anyway). ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":3298,"content":3302},{"target":3299},{"sys":3300},{"id":3301,"type":282,"linkType":283},"4ua9ZNNSnxJnRLwJvRTaf1",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":3304,"content":3305},{},[3306],{"nodeType":247,"value":3307,"marks":3308,"data":3309},"You can see here that attackers have established methods of routinely bypassing these controls. In contrast, with Push, there are layered detections against different stages of the attack path to account takeover, providing defense-in-depth should a layer be somehow bypassed.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":3311,"content":3315},{"target":3312},{"sys":3313},{"id":3314,"type":282,"linkType":283},"ogIj92nzV9Q2Z7I9YOgG3",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":3317,"content":3318},{},[3319],{"nodeType":247,"value":3320,"marks":3321,"data":3322},"In practice, this creates four strong lines of defense – all before an attacker can even take over an account. ",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":3324,"content":3325},{},[3326,3347,3368,3389],{"nodeType":342,"data":3327,"content":3328},{},[3329],{"nodeType":252,"data":3330,"content":3331},{},[3332,3336,3344],{"nodeType":247,"value":3333,"marks":3334,"data":3335},"1st line: ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":3337,"content":3339},{"uri":3338},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/introducing-cloned-login-page-detection/",[3340],{"nodeType":247,"value":3341,"marks":3342,"data":3343},"Detecting when a login page that you access is cloned from a legitimate page.",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":29,"marks":3345,"data":3346},[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3348,"content":3349},{},[3350],{"nodeType":252,"data":3351,"content":3352},{},[3353,3357,3365],{"nodeType":247,"value":3354,"marks":3355,"data":3356},"2nd line: ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":3358,"content":3360},{"uri":3359},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/introducing-aitm-phishing-toolkit-detection-powered-by-the-push-browser/",[3361],{"nodeType":247,"value":3362,"marks":3363,"data":3364},"Detecting and blocking access to a page with a known phishing kit signature present on the page",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2593,"marks":3366,"data":3367},[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3369,"content":3370},{},[3371],{"nodeType":252,"data":3372,"content":3373},{},[3374,3378,3386],{"nodeType":247,"value":3375,"marks":3376,"data":3377},"3rd line: ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":3379,"content":3381},{"uri":3380},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/introducing-sso-password-protection/",[3382],{"nodeType":247,"value":3383,"marks":3384,"data":3385},"Detecting and blocking the user behavior of entering their password into any site that the password doesn’t belong to",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2593,"marks":3387,"data":3388},[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3390,"content":3391},{},[3392],{"nodeType":252,"data":3393,"content":3394},{},[3395,3399,3407],{"nodeType":247,"value":3396,"marks":3397,"data":3398},"4th line: ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":3400,"content":3402},{"uri":3401},"https://pushsecurity.com/blog/introducing-session-token-theft-detection-why-browser-is-best/",[3403],{"nodeType":247,"value":3404,"marks":3405,"data":3406},"Detecting when an attacker resumes a stolen session in a browser without the Push extension running. ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":29,"marks":3408,"data":3409},[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3411,"content":3412},{},[3413],{"nodeType":247,"value":3414,"marks":3415,"data":3416},"Each of these controls either detects and blocks the account takeover attempt outright, or provides a high-fidelity indicator that should trigger a priority investigation via your SecOps workflow. ",[],{},{"nodeType":243,"data":3418,"content":3419},{},[3420],{"nodeType":247,"value":3421,"marks":3422,"data":3424},"Conclusion",[3423],{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3426,"content":3427},{},[3428],{"nodeType":247,"value":3429,"marks":3430,"data":3431},"Hopefully we’ve demonstrated shifting detection left isn’t just possible, but essential for defending against modern identity attacks and account takeover. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3433,"content":3434},{},[3435,3439,3447],{"nodeType":247,"value":3436,"marks":3437,"data":3438},"This is the second post in our design philosophy series, so if you want to read about how we’re building detections that are hard for attackers to bypass using the Pyramid of Pain, ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":3440,"content":3441},{"uri":3245},[3442],{"nodeType":247,"value":3443,"marks":3444,"data":3446},"you can check it out here",[3445],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2593,"marks":3448,"data":3449},[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3451,"content":3452},{},[3453],{"nodeType":247,"value":3454,"marks":3455,"data":3456},"We look forward to sharing more about our design philosophy with you in the future! ",[],{},"Shifting detection left for more effective threat detection","Why relying on post-compromise detection and response is no longer an option for modern browser-based attacks.","2024-10-25T00:00:00.000Z","shifting-detection-left-for-more-effective-threat-detection",{"items":3462},[3463,3465],{"sys":3464,"name":2619},{"id":2618},{"sys":3466,"name":3468},{"id":3467},"6A5RXS31ZQx3PwryGb1IMy","Browser-based attacks",{"items":3470},[3471],{"fullName":3472,"firstName":3473,"jobTitle":3474,"profilePicture":3475},"Dan Green","Dan","Threat Research",{"url":3476},"https://images.ctfassets.net/y1cdw1ablpvd/7jik1VhFgA3kgzXBXTm2Vw/fcd8c171da644903d0827eafcfbcaad0/Dan_Headshot_2025.png",{"__typename":1781,"sys":3478,"content":3480,"title":3796,"synopsis":3797,"hashTags":62,"publishedDate":3798,"slug":3799,"tagsCollection":3800,"authorsCollection":3806},{"id":3479},"4bYO5rVy9n2OO3vtMVQeda",{"json":3481},{"nodeType":239,"data":3482,"content":3483},{},[3484,3491,3509,3525,3532,3539,3542,3549,3556,3609,3616,3622,3625,3632,3639,3646,3653,3660,3677,3683,3690,3697,3714,3720,3727,3734,3741,3748,3755,3758,3765,3784,3790],{"nodeType":243,"data":3485,"content":3486},{},[3487],{"nodeType":247,"value":3488,"marks":3489,"data":3490},"All phishing eventually leads to the browser",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3492,"content":3493},{},[3494,3498,3506],{"nodeType":247,"value":3495,"marks":3496,"data":3497},"The best attack detection methods are those that focus on ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":3499,"content":3500},{"uri":3245},[3501],{"nodeType":247,"value":3502,"marks":3503,"data":3505},"detecting indicators that are difficult for attackers to change or obfuscate",[3504],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":2593,"marks":3507,"data":3508},[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3510,"content":3511},{},[3512,3516,3521],{"nodeType":247,"value":3513,"marks":3514,"data":3515},"For a credential phishing attack to succeed, the victim ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3517,"marks":3518,"data":3520},"has",[3519],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3522,"marks":3523,"data":3524}," to enter their password into a webpage. There’s no two-ways about it, attackers cannot change this. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3526,"content":3527},{},[3528],{"nodeType":247,"value":3529,"marks":3530,"data":3531},"So it stands to reason that, if you can detect this user behavior, and block them from entering their password, then you can stop phishing. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3533,"content":3534},{},[3535],{"nodeType":247,"value":3536,"marks":3537,"data":3538},"This is exactly what Push does.",[],{},{"nodeType":320,"data":3540,"content":3541},{},[],{"nodeType":457,"data":3543,"content":3544},{},[3545],{"nodeType":247,"value":3546,"marks":3547,"data":3548},"Most anti-phishing tools are easily bypassed",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3550,"content":3551},{},[3552],{"nodeType":247,"value":3553,"marks":3554,"data":3555},"Other anti-phishing tools rely on detecting elements of the attack that attackers can change and hide, such as domains or the webpage contents. Attackers use tricks to evade these detection, like:",[],{},{"nodeType":338,"data":3557,"content":3558},{},[3559,3569,3579,3589,3599],{"nodeType":342,"data":3560,"content":3561},{},[3562],{"nodeType":252,"data":3563,"content":3564},{},[3565],{"nodeType":247,"value":3566,"marks":3567,"data":3568},"Using Cloudflare Workers to block automatic analysis of their phishing site",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3570,"content":3571},{},[3572],{"nodeType":252,"data":3573,"content":3574},{},[3575],{"nodeType":247,"value":3576,"marks":3577,"data":3578},"Hacking a Wordpress blog to get a reputable domain that passes domain checks ",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3580,"content":3581},{},[3582],{"nodeType":252,"data":3583,"content":3584},{},[3585],{"nodeType":247,"value":3586,"marks":3587,"data":3588},"Using redirects and rotating the URLs delivered to the victim to bypass link analysis",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3590,"content":3591},{},[3592],{"nodeType":252,"data":3593,"content":3594},{},[3595],{"nodeType":247,"value":3596,"marks":3597,"data":3598},"Randomizing the HTML title for the web page to bypass blocklists ",[],{},{"nodeType":342,"data":3600,"content":3601},{},[3602],{"nodeType":252,"data":3603,"content":3604},{},[3605],{"nodeType":247,"value":3606,"marks":3607,"data":3608},"One-time phishing links that only work the first time they are clicked",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3610,"content":3611},{},[3612],{"nodeType":247,"value":3613,"marks":3614,"data":3615},"Push is putting an end to this game of cat and mouse, by keeping it really simple; you can’t phish someone who can’t put their password into a phishing page. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":3617,"content":3621},{"target":3618},{"sys":3619},{"id":3620,"type":282,"linkType":283},"6AwOZSpqaChmeksnj4SyWE",[],{"nodeType":320,"data":3623,"content":3624},{},[],{"nodeType":457,"data":3626,"content":3627},{},[3628],{"nodeType":247,"value":3629,"marks":3630,"data":3631},"Domain-binding passwords",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3633,"content":3634},{},[3635],{"nodeType":247,"value":3636,"marks":3637,"data":3638},"If you’re familiar with how passkeys are domain-bound, then think of what Push does as domain-binding passwords. We pin the password to its legitimate domain(s) and then don’t allow it to be entered into any webpage on any other domain. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3640,"content":3641},{},[3642],{"nodeType":247,"value":3643,"marks":3644,"data":3645},"But just because you’ve stopped your users from being phished doesn’t mean you don’t want to know when attackers are attempting to phish your users and how. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3647,"content":3648},{},[3649],{"nodeType":247,"value":3650,"marks":3651,"data":3652},"Push still inspects webpages to see if attackers are rendering cloned app login pages in the browser or if known AitM and BitM toolkits are being used. This way you don’t lose visibility of the unsuccessful attacks that are targeting your users. Think of it as a handy second and third layer of defense.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3654,"content":3655},{},[3656],{"nodeType":247,"value":3657,"marks":3658,"data":3659},"Lets run through a quick before and after example:",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":3661,"content":3662},{},[3663,3667,3673],{"nodeType":247,"value":3664,"marks":3665,"data":3666},"Scenario 1: An attacker attempts to phish an employee that ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3668,"marks":3669,"data":3672},"doesn’t",[3670,3671],{"type":2142},{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3674,"marks":3675,"data":3676}," have Push deployed to their browser.",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":3678,"content":3682},{"target":3679},{"sys":3680},{"id":3681,"type":282,"linkType":283},"2CbGMUSJsP1mNeHkmpLl6N",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":3684,"content":3685},{},[3686],{"nodeType":247,"value":3687,"marks":3688,"data":3689},"Here, an attacker hacks a Wordpress blog to get a reputable domain and then runs a phishing toolkit on the webpage. They email one of your employees a link to it. Your SWG / email scanning solution inspects it in a sandbox but the phish kit detects this and redirects to a benign site so that it passes the inspection. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3691,"content":3692},{},[3693],{"nodeType":247,"value":3694,"marks":3695,"data":3696},"Your user gets the email with the link and is now free to interact with the phishing page. They enter their credentials plus MFA code into the page and voila! The attacker steals them and is able to compromise the user’s account.  ",[],{},{"nodeType":457,"data":3698,"content":3699},{},[3700,3704,3710],{"nodeType":247,"value":3701,"marks":3702,"data":3703},"Scenario 2: An attacker attempts to phish an employee that ",[],{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3705,"marks":3706,"data":3709},"does",[3707,3708],{"type":2142},{"type":475},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3711,"marks":3712,"data":3713}," have Push deployed to their browser. ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":3715,"content":3719},{"target":3716},{"sys":3717},{"id":3718,"type":282,"linkType":283},"77smnID1woCfFJrJPyTvKY",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":3721,"content":3722},{},[3723],{"nodeType":247,"value":3724,"marks":3725,"data":3726},"This time, the attacker uses the same phishing toolkit and domain from the first example. But in reality, they don’t have to send it to your employee using email, instead, they could use LinkedIn messenger, Slack, Teams, or any application that allows employees to communicate with each other. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3728,"content":3729},{},[3730],{"nodeType":247,"value":3731,"marks":3732,"data":3733},"Like before, the user receives the link, opens it and starts to enter their credentials into the webpage. This time though, the Push browser extension inspects the webpage running in the user's browser. Push observes that the webpage is a login page and the user is entering their password into the page.",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3735,"content":3736},{},[3737],{"nodeType":247,"value":3738,"marks":3739,"data":3740},"The first detection Push makes is checking that the password the user is entering matches the domain that password is pinned to. Since it doesn't match, based on this detection alone the user is automatically redirected to a blocking page. An important point to make here is that the password never leaves the user’s browser and the check is made using a shortened salted hash of the password.   ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3742,"content":3743},{},[3744],{"nodeType":247,"value":3745,"marks":3746,"data":3747},"The second detection Push makes is that the rendered web app is using a cloned app login page. The third detection is that a phishing toolkit is running in the web app code. ",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3749,"content":3750},{},[3751],{"nodeType":247,"value":3752,"marks":3753,"data":3754},"In this particular scenario these second and third detections serve as useful context for understanding the nature of the phishing attack. But both will still redirect to a blocking page if they are triggered in isolation of the other phishing detections. ",[],{},{"nodeType":320,"data":3756,"content":3757},{},[],{"nodeType":243,"data":3759,"content":3760},{},[3761],{"nodeType":247,"value":3762,"marks":3763,"data":3764},"We don’t just stop phishing attacks",[],{},{"nodeType":252,"data":3766,"content":3767},{},[3768,3772,3780],{"nodeType":247,"value":3769,"marks":3770,"data":3771},"We also detect other identity-related attack techniques used to compromise user accounts. That includes credential stuffing, password spraying and session hijacking using stolen session tokens. If you want to learn more about how Push helps you to detect and defeat common identity attack techniques, ",[],{},{"nodeType":293,"data":3773,"content":3774},{"uri":2585},[3775],{"nodeType":247,"value":3776,"marks":3777,"data":3779},"book some time with one of our team",[3778],{"type":2142},{},{"nodeType":247,"value":3781,"marks":3782,"data":3783},".  ",[],{},{"nodeType":277,"data":3785,"content":3789},{"target":3786},{"sys":3787},{"id":3788,"type":282,"linkType":283},"2JSmYDaiAciOx7Z1MRuJlA",[],{"nodeType":252,"data":3791,"content":3792},{},[3793],{"nodeType":247,"value":29,"marks":3794,"data":3795},[],{},"Detecting and blocking phishing attacks in the browser","How Push detects and blocks phishing attempts in the browser – explained in less than two minutes. ","2024-10-23T00:00:00.000Z","detecting-and-blocking-phishing-attacks-in-the-browser",{"items":3801},[3802,3804],{"sys":3803,"name":3468},{"id":3467},{"sys":3805,"name":2619},{"id":2618},{"items":3807},[3808],{"fullName":3809,"firstName":3810,"jobTitle":234,"profilePicture":3811},"Alex Henshall","Alex",{"url":3812},"https://images.ctfassets.net/y1cdw1ablpvd/2rz3Pre3b1MexPIQ4hzPUe/0ef8a092b7e7df00fbce3f7d1ccb96d1/Alex_Henshall.jpeg","navigating-your-first-90-days-with-push","blog/navigating-your-first-90-days-with-push",{"json":3816},{"data":3817,"content":3818,"nodeType":239},{},[3819],{"data":3820,"content":3821,"nodeType":252},{},[3822],{"data":3823,"marks":3824,"value":3825,"nodeType":247},{},[],"Inspired by the classic 1980s video game Oregon Trail, we’ve put together the following guide for intrepid security teams who are traveling across potentially unknown territory as they uncover their identity attack surface and secure it against modern identity attacks.","We’ve put together the following guide for intrepid security teams as they use Push to secure against modern identity attacks.",{"id":3828,"publishedAt":3829},"3lWfiuAMsVecxVyEKiwV0c","2024-12-09T16:15:38.472Z",{"items":3831},[3832],{"sys":3833,"name":3835},{"id":3834},"3pjES4THCIfSAwhGdNwBcy","Browser security","UdD_-i29w4N9fCBQkrCw9GtAxof3ZH4_qnVC3zF1hNY",1784196727255]