RE: Kaseya



Well, from what I understand it gather's it's data by ping scanning the
network and referencing the results to it's database of PCs that it's
agent is installed on. If there is an IP that isn't in the database
that comes up hot, it trys to access the IPC$ share I believe. If it
can access it, it flags it as a Windows box and trys to install it's
agent on the device. If not, it leaves it and moves on.

Weaknesses that stand out to me are 2 things. One being that depending
on how often you have the appliance set to scan and how old your network
gear is, it could flood your network. Two being that in order to access
the IPC$ share on all the machines, you have to use a domain account
that has rights to install software on the machine. Most times this
ends up with the MSP requiring a domain admin account because no one
wants to fool with delegating permissions.

So in theory, you have an appliance that floods your network with pings
and possible clear txt attempts at using a domain admin account.

-----Original Message-----
From: listbounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:listbounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of M.B.Jr.
Sent: Saturday, May 24, 2008 2:01 PM
To: pen-test list
Subject: Kaseya

Hello list,
there's this infrastructure tool set for automating managed services,
named Kaseya (proprietary technology).

Basically, the managed-services-provider controls one of his customers'
remote LANs with two intercommunicating "appliances":

* a Kaseya dedicated server located at the MSP data center; and

* a "probe" equipment at the remote LAN.

The audit team to which I belong is about to examine the probe-featured
LAN.
Right now, we're researching whether this "solution" can cause the LAN
some weaknesses; the resulting research's report is going to shape the
logical tests.

So, the question is (I guess):
does anyone know of any Kaseya-enhanced LAN security
implication/vulnerability?

Thank you,
yours sincerely,


--
Marcio Barbado, Jr.

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