When you work with one or multiple Microsoft Sentinel workspaces you may find it necessary to not only deploy Analytics rules and other configuration artifacts using a version controlled source control (CI/CD) to limit human error and enforce consistency. But you might also want to independently verify your deployment on a regular basis.
I certainly did and set out to write a test driven solution.
Since I love to use PowerShell and there is already a superb test framework, the tool to use for the task at hand was an easy choice: Pester.
While working on another blog post I looked at different lateral movement paths an attacker can use, when she has compromised the Entra ID (Azure AD) Connect server. Since this is the gateway to the cloud environment there already is quite some research available.
When reading the existent posts about this topic, the main lateral movement path mentioned is a password reset to take over a privileged account synced to the cloud.
If you have worked with Microsoft Sentinel you will, at one point, stumbled over two different file formats for Analytics Rules: YAML and ARM.
The YAML format is mostly used to distribute Analytics Rules between people. All Analytics Rules you will find in the official Sentinel GitHub repo and others out there are offered in this format.
The ARM format is what you need to deploy the Analytics Rules when using a pipeline or even if you want to import them using the UI in Microsoft Sentinel.
Business email compromise and phishing are just two of the threats sent to hundreds and thousands of email inboxes around the world every day. As defenders, we use various tools and methods to limit the delivery of these emails to the intended target.
In most cases, the attackers start by registering a domain that closely resembles the target company’s own domain name, or simply include the company name in the domain (e.
Integrate MDI health alerts in Microsoft Sentinel or how to turn every e-mail notification in a custom alert in Sentinel and customize alert details for your benefit.
Over the weekend I finished a really fun project I had in mind for a couple of weeks.
My newest website: AnalyticsRules.Exchange
In this post I will explain the reason why I created this new website, as well on how I did it. At the moment I will not publish the code, not because I don’t want to share it, but because it’s super ugly and not something I want to be a source for other people to start with.