Netskope est à nouveau reconnu comme leader dans le Magic Quadrant de Gartner®™ pour les plates-formes SASE. Obtenir le rapport

fermer
fermer
Le réseau de demain
Le réseau de demain
Planifiez votre chemin vers un réseau plus rapide, plus sûr et plus résilient, conçu pour les applications et les utilisateurs que vous prenez en charge.
          Essayez Netskope
          Mettez la main à la pâte avec la plateforme Netskope
          C'est l'occasion de découvrir la plateforme Netskope One single-cloud de première main. Inscrivez-vous à des laboratoires pratiques à votre rythme, rejoignez-nous pour des démonstrations mensuelles de produits en direct, faites un essai gratuit de Netskope Private Access ou participez à des ateliers dirigés par un instructeur.
            Un leader sur SSE. Désormais leader en matière de SASE à fournisseur unique.
            Netskope est reconnu comme le leader le plus avancé dans sa vision pour les plateformes SSE et SASE.
            2X est un leader dans le Magic Quadrant de Gartner® pour les plateformes SASE
            Une plateforme unifiée conçue pour votre parcours
              Sécuriser l’IA générative pour les nuls
              Sécuriser l’IA générative pour les nuls
              Découvrez comment votre organisation peut concilier le potentiel d'innovation de l'IA générative avec des pratiques robustes en matière de sécurité des données.
                Prévention des pertes de données (DLP) pour les Nuls eBook
                La prévention moderne des pertes de données (DLP) pour les Nuls
                Obtenez des conseils et des astuces pour passer à un système de prévention des pertes de données (DLP) dans le nuage.
                  Réseau SD-WAN moderne avec SASE pour les nuls
                  SD-WAN moderne pour les nuls en SASE
                  Cessez de rattraper votre retard en matière d'architecture de réseau
                    Identification des risques
                    Advanced Analytics transforme la façon dont les équipes chargées des opérations de sécurité utilisent les données pour mettre en œuvre de meilleures politiques. Avec Advanced Analytics, vous pouvez identifier les tendances, cibler les domaines préoccupants et utiliser les données pour prendre des mesures.
                        Support technique de Netskope
                        Support technique de Netskope
                        Nos ingénieurs d'assistance qualifiés sont répartis dans le monde entier et possèdent des expériences diverses dans les domaines de la sécurité du cloud, des réseaux, de la virtualisation, de la diffusion de contenu et du développement de logiciels, afin de garantir une assistance technique rapide et de qualité
                          Vidéo Netskope
                          Formation Netskope
                          Grâce à Netskope, devenez un expert de la sécurité du cloud. Nous sommes là pour vous aider à achever votre transformation digitale en toute sécurité, pour que vous puissiez profiter pleinement de vos applications cloud, Web et privées.

                            Cloud Threats Memo: Understanding the Growing Risk of Consent Phishing

                            Feb 02 2023

                            The advent of cloud applications led to a new generation of phishing attacks (named OAuth phishing or consent phishing) where, rather than stealing the user credentials,  threat actors aim to obtain an authorization token via a rogue cloud app that allows them to perform harmful activities on the victim’s cloud environment. These activities include: reading emails, sending emails on behalf of the victim itself, reading the calendar, changing profile and email settings, and many others permissions that can be exploited to steal confidential information from the target.

                            The so-called user experience is similar to a traditional phishing attack. The victim receives a malicious link, for example via a spear phishing email, but instead of being presented with a form mimicking a legitimate app eager to steal their credentials, they are presented with an authentication page where a seemingly legitimate cloud app asks to access their cloud environment with specific permissions on behalf of the user, permissions that the victims do not double check and end up delivering attackers the keys of the kingdom Multi-factor authentication does not help to mitigate this attack, since the user must authenticate to the target app to provide consent to the malicious application. Then once the authorization token is issued, the only way to remediate is to delete the malicious app from the target environment or, in other terms, revoke the token.

                            Example of an OAuth phishing page allowing the consent to manage emails and contacts

                            Threat actors have been exploiting this technique since at least 2017 for both opportunistic and targeted campaigns: APT 28 (also known as Pawn Storm) is the first known example of a state-sponsored threat actor exploiting OAuth phishing since 2017. But the risks of this attack were almost completely unknown to the wider audience, until May 3rd of the same year, when a massive OAuth worm hit more than one million Google Workspace users (and yes, it was called G Suite back then).

                            Since then, there have been multiple examples of campaigns carried out via OAuth phishing, and the risks connected with third-party application access to corporate data are a reality, and will also be the topic of a presentation of our Netskope Threat Labs at the forthcoming RSA Conference by our top-rated speaker Jenko Hwong.

                            In the latest occurrence, Microsoft and Proofpoint have just taken down a network of fraudulent, verified Microsoft Partner Network accounts exploited to create malicious OAuth applications with the purpose to infiltrate the cloud environments of corporate users in the UK and Ireland and steal sensitive information.

                            The campaign occurred between December 6 and December 27, 2022, and the threat actors impersonated credible publishers to become verified themselves, and provide even better legitimacy to the malicious OAuth apps. According to Microsoft, the rogue apps were used to steal customers’ emails, but according to Proofpoint, the reality is unsurprisingly worse since the app’s permissions could have allowed the attackers to access calendars and meeting information and modify user permissions.

                            Netskope SSPM (SaaS Security Posture Management) continuously monitors and enforces SaaS security settings, policies, and best practices to reduce security and compliance risks, helping organizations to detect rogue applications with harmful permissions and enforce the corresponding remediation actions. Among the entities that can be monitored for a Microsoft 365 environment, there are also the OAuth permission grants to third-party apps (entity OAuth2PermissionGrant), so that organizations can be alerted if an OAuth app obtains permissions considered harmful and too intrusive. As noted earlier, once a user falls into the trap of OAuth phishing, the only possibility is to revoke the authorization token and remove the application, and Netskope SSPM can certainly identify malicious OAuth apps and provide the organization with actionable information to remediate the threat.

                            For example a rule that verifies that the OAuth permissions granted to third-party apps will not modify app role assignments, is part of the predefined profiles: 

                            • CSA-CCM-4.0– CSA Cloud Controls Matrix
                            • GDPR-2016-679– General Data Protection Regulation 2016/679
                            • HIPAA-1996– Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
                            • ISO-27002-2013– ISO/IEC 27002:2013
                            • NIST-CSF-1.1– NIST Cybersecurity Framework
                            • NIST-800-53-4– NIST SP 800-53 Rev. 4
                            • PCI-DSS-3.0– PCI Data Security Standard v3.0
                            • AICPA-SOC-TSC-2017– AICPA SOC2 2017 Trust Services Criteria for Security, Availability, Processing Integrity, Confidentiality, and Privacy

                            However it is also possible to create custom rules that check for specific scopes considered harmful or non-compliant with the internal policies.

                            Stay safe!

                            author image
                            Paolo Passeri
                            Paolo supports Netskope’s customers in protecting their journey to the cloud and is a security professional, with 20+ years experience in the infosec industry.
                            Paolo supports Netskope’s customers in protecting their journey to the cloud and is a security professional, with 20+ years experience in the infosec industry.
                            Connectez-vous avec Netskope

                            Subscribe to the Netskope Blog

                            Sign up to receive a roundup of the latest Netskope content delivered directly in your inbox every month.