Originally C# Azure Function (Later ported to JS) with an HTTP trigger that generates obfuscated PowerShell snippets that break or disable AMSI for the current process. The snippets are randomly selected from a small pool of techniques/variations before being obfuscated. Every snippet is obfuscated at runtime/request so that no generated output share the same signatures.
Checkout https://amsi.fail/ for a live and working demo!
As f-secure explained in one of their excellent blog-posts:
AMSI is an interface on which applications or services (third-party included) are able to scan a script’s content for malicious usage. If a signature in the script is registered by the AMSI antimalware service provider (Windows Defender by default), it will be blocked. To put this into context, consider the following steps PowerShell takes to integrate with AMSI:
- When a PowerShell process is created, AMSI.DLL is loaded from disk into its address space.
- Within AMSI.DLL, there’s a function known as AmsiScanBuffer(), essentially the function used to scan a script’s content.
- In the PowerShell command prompt, any supplied content would first be sent to AmsiScanBuffer(), before any execution takes place.
- Subsequently, AmsiScanBuffer() would check with the registered anti-virus to determine if any signatures have been created.
- If the content is deemed malicious, it would be blocked.
Since AMSI relies on being loaded within the process executing the actual script, techniques to break or patch specific functions within amsi.dll are well known.
- Special thanks to @S3cur3Th1sSh1t for adding the @rasta-mouse C# bypass
- Also MAJOR thanks to @MartinIngesen for porting the C# project into JS , reduced cost and increased speed!