fbpx
Frame-14

Privacy Ninja

        • DATA PROTECTION

        • CYBERSECURITY

        • Penetration Testing

          Secure your network against various threat points. VA starts at only S$1,000, while VAPT starts at S$4,000. With Price Beat Guarantee!

        • API Penetration Testing
        • Enhance your digital security posture with our approach that identifies and addresses vulnerabilities within your API framework, ensuring robust protection against cyber threats targeting your digital interfaces.

        • On-Prem & Cloud Network Penetration Testing
        • Boost your network’s resilience with our assessment that uncovers security gaps, so you can strengthen your defences against sophisticated cyber threats targeting your network

        • Web Penetration Testing
        • Fortify your web presence with our specialised web app penetration testing service, designed to uncover and address vulnerabilities, ensuring your website stands resilient against online threats

        • Mobile Penetration Testing
        • Strengthen your mobile ecosystem’s resilience with our in-depth penetration testing service. From applications to underlying systems, we meticulously probe for vulnerabilities

        • Cyber Hygiene Training
        • Empower your team with essential cybersecurity knowledge, covering the latest vulnerabilities, best practices, and proactive defence strategies

        • Thick Client Penetration Testing
        • Elevate your application’s security with our thorough thick client penetration testing service. From standalone desktop applications to complex client-server systems, we meticulously probe for vulnerabilities to fortify your software against potential cyber threats.

        • Source Code Review
        • Ensure the integrity and security of your codebase with our comprehensive service, meticulously analysing code quality, identifying vulnerabilities, and optimising performance for various types of applications, scripts, plugins, and more

        • Email Spoofing Prevention
        • Check if your organisation’s email is vulnerable to hackers and put a stop to it. Receive your free test today!

        • Email Phishing Excercise
        • Strengthen your defense against email threats via simulated attacks that test and educate your team on spotting malicious emails, reducing breach risks and boosting security.

        • Cyber Essentials Bundle
        • Equip your organisation with essential cyber protection through our packages, featuring quarterly breached accounts monitoring, email phishing campaigns, cyber hygiene training, and more. LAUNCHING SOON.

SteelSeries Bug Gives Windows 10 Admin Rights By Plugging in a Device

SteelSeries Bug Gives Windows 10 Admin Rights By Plugging in a Device

The official app for installing SteelSeries devices on Windows 10 can be exploited to obtain administrator rights, a security researcher has found.

Leveraging the bug is possible during the device setup process, using a link in the License Agreement screen that is opened with SYSTEM privileges. A real SteelSeries device is not necessary to exploit the bug.

Emulating a device also works

The discovery comes after news broke over the weekend that the Razer Synapse software can be used to gain elevated privileges when connecting a Razer mouse or keyboard.

Encouraged by the research from jonhat, offensive security researcher Lawrence Amer (research team leader at 0xsp) found that the same can be achieved with the SteelSeries device installation software.

Playing with a recently acquired SteelSeries keyboard on Monday, the researcher discovered a privilege escalation vulnerability that allowed him to run the Command Prompt in Windows 10 with admin privileges.

The SteelSeries software is not just for keyboards (Apex 7/Pro), though. It also installs and allows configuring mice (Rival 650/600/710) and headsets (Arctis 9, Pro) from the maker; it even lets users control the RGB lighting on the QCK Prism gaming mousepad.

Amer started by plugging in his keyboard and monitoring the installation process, which started with downloading the SteelSeries software (SteelSeriesGG6.2.0Setup.exe) to the Windows temporary folder.

A real SteelSeries device is not necessary for this attack to work. Penetration testing researcher István Tóth published an open-source script that can mimic human interface devices (HID) on an Android phone, specifically for testing local privilege escalation (LPE) scenarios.

Also Read: Top 3 Common Data Protection Mistakes, Revealed

Although an experimental version, the script can successfully emulate both Razer and SteelSeries devices.

After Amer published his research, Tóth published a video demonstrating that LPE discovered by Amer can be achieved using his USB Gadget Generator Tool.

Also Read: The Financial Cost of Ransomware Attack

Finding the right context

In trying to find a weak spot, Amer poked around trying to find a way to load a missing DLL or EXE from folders accessible to unprivileged users but did not find any.

However, he noticed that the device setup app was launched with SYSTEM rights immediately after downloading it. Another process running with the highest privileges provided a new opportunity for attack.

Also Read: Vulnerability Management For Cybersecurity Dummies

Amer tried the same method that worked for the Razer zero-day vulnerability, but it did not work because the installation carries on without user interaction.

The researcher caught a lucky break when the License Agreement appeared with a link to SteelSeries’ privacy policy. When clicking on the link, the dialog for choosing a launching app appeared.

Amer tested the scenario in a virtual machine that did not have file associations defined. The only process available for opening the link was Internet Explorer, which spawned as SYSTEM.

From there, it was a simple matter of using IE to save the web page and launch an elevated privileges Command Prompt from the right-click menu of the “Save As” dialog.

Amer told BleepingComputer that he tried informing SteelSeries about the vulnerability but could not find a public bug bounty program or a contact for product security.

BleepingComputer reached out to SteelSeries about this but did not hear back by publishing time.

The researcher says that the vulnerability could still be exploited even after patching it. An attacker could save the vulnerable signed executable dropped in the temporary folder when plugging in a SteelSeries device and serve it in a DNS poisoning attack.

0 Comments

KEEP IN TOUCH

Subscribe to our mailing list to get free tips on Data Protection and Data Privacy updates weekly!

Personal Data Protection

REPORTING DATA BREACH TO PDPC?

We have assisted numerous companies to prepare proper and accurate reports to PDPC to minimise financial penalties.
×

Hello!

Click one of our contacts below to chat on WhatsApp

× Chat with us