/cuddlephish

Weaponized Browser-in-the-Middle (BitM) for Penetration Testers

Primary LanguageHTML

CuddlePhish

cuddy

Weaponized multi-user browser-in-the-middle (BitM) for penetration testers. This attack can be used to bypass multi-factor authentication on many high-value web applications. It even works for applications that do not use session tokens, and therefore would not be exploitable using traditional token stealing attacks. This is a social engineering tool and does not exploit any technical flaws in the target service.

QuickStart

This tool is a specialized web server. It is designed to run on a Debian 11 (Bullseye) Linux server and relies on public IP information to protect the admin functionality. Don't expect to be able to test locally without jumping through some serious hoops.

Warning: Chromium is not supported on ARM. While it is technically possible to force the use of an ARM chromium binary, you will lose all the additional features/protections of puppeteer-extra.

This example setup utilizes Caddy to handle TLS, SNI, and add a couple of custom headers like 'X-Real-IP' to each request. You don't have to use Caddy with Cuddlephish, as the same reverse proxy can be set up using Nginx, Apache, etc. I just like Caddy because it is easy to install with Docker, and has plugins to manage Letsencrypt certs for most domain registrars. The example Caddyfile shows how you would set it up for Gandi. Check the docs for your registrar.

Install Docker, Node, XVFB, and some other dependencies:

git clone https://github.com/fkasler/cuddlephish
cd cuddlephish
sudo bash install_deps.sh

You can then use Docker to build Caddy with a wildcard cert plugin for your registrar. The example is for Gandi. Check the docs here and the list of dns provider modules here. You can mod the Dockerfile for your registrar before building:

sudo docker build -t caddy .

Now mod the Caddyfile to swap your domain and Gandi (or other registrar) API key, and start Caddy. I recommend starting this in a screen or tmux window so that you can run the Node server in another window in a moment:

sudo docker run -p 80:80 -p 443:443 -p 2019:2019 -v $PWD/Caddyfile:/etc/caddy/Caddyfile --network=host caddy:latest

With Caddy fielding traffic for us on 80 and 443, we can finally run the tool!

Install the Node dependencies:

npm install

A few config tweaks: CRITICAL STEP: Make sure to mod the example config.json to add your approved public IP(s) for admin access. This whitelist of IPs is what dictates access to the "/admin" web interface. You should also change the default socket key to something more secure.

The tool is not set up to target any logins by default so you will need to add some. There is an 'add_target.js' script to make this step easy. Just run the script and paste in the URL of the login portal you would like to target when prompted:

node add_target.js

This will grab the service name, tab title, and favicon for you and add an entry to 'targets.json'. You can run this script multiple times and it will append your new targets. The script will name each service based on the domain, without the top level. So, for 'https://www.example.com/login.php' the service would just be 'example' when specifying your target when you...

Run it!

node index.js example

After a few seconds, you should see a message in the console when your first automated Chrome instance checks in over websockets. Now visitors to your phishing site should see what appears to be the target login page but is actually a video feed of your automated browser instance. They can also interact with your browser instance and log in for you.

If you properly configured your admin IP(s) in the config.json, you should be able to view a special '/admin' web interface to track users, view key logs, takeover control of logged in browser instances, steal cookies, and delete unwanted browser instances.

Note: You will not see anything in the admin page until you have some victims. Once you have a victim, their browser instance should pop up on the admin UI.

Troubleshooting ("I just see a blank page")

I have had several people open issues about a "Blank White Page", which is more of a symptom of many possible issues, and not an issue in itself. Please do not open issues under vague symptom names. Instead, if you have a blank page on the user side, try first looking into the following:

  • Check that the tab title of the target service does not have any special characters in it. We use "--auto-select-desktop-capture-source" to tell our automated browser what tab to stream. This option fails for titles with special characters in them. However, you don't need the full tab title to mach, and just need enough of a substring for a unique match.
  • Along the same line, if your target service sends a 302 or similar redirect to your automated browser, and the tab title changes before we start the WebRTC broadcast to a vicitim, then "--auto-select-desktop-capture-source" will fail. You can look at how add_target.js grabs this information, and replicate it on the index.js along with a console.log() statement to see if the title is has changed before negotiating WebRTC.
  • Check that the cuddlephish HTML is loading, and that there aren't any obvious JavaScript errors in the developer console on the front-end. The example Caddy config has some basic blocks on user agent strings like curl. At a minimum, you should see that the tab title and favicon are being spoofed.
  • Ensure that you can interact with the example STUN service and port (stun.l.google.com:19302) from your server.
  • Ensure that the network you are working from even allows STUN. STUN only works with "full-cone NAT", "(Address)-restricted-cone NAT", and "Port-restricted cone NAT". It DOES NOT work with "Symmetric NAT".
  • Ensure you can interact with the example STUN service and port (stun.l.google.com:19302) from your test victim browser. Try using https://icetest.info/.
  • If your network cannot reach the example STUN server, then change it to one you can reach. If your network does not allow STUN, then there is an example config for a TURN server in the cuddlephish and broadcast HTML pages. You will have to set up or pay for your own TURN server. NOTE: A TURN server has the best chance of connecting phishing vicitims to with your browser instances.

At a high level, if you just see a blank page on the front-end, then it means there is some breakdown occuring in the chain of data flow from "Start WebRTC" > "Select Tab to Broadcast" > "Negotiate ICE with Vicitim's Browser" > "Stream Video". The above troubleshooting steps are intended to help you follow the data through this process. When working properly, you should expect to see a log stream on the server similar to the following:

troubleshoot

I hope this helps with any issues, and as always, sufficient information to consistently replicate an issue is a prerequisite for submitting issues for further investigation.

Admin Features

Send Payload:

Manually trigger a payload to download to the victim's system via JavaScript. Each target starts off with 'payload.txt' as a test payload. Just swap the file location in targets.json to send a custom payload.

Boot User:

Sends a window.location change to the victim to send them to the real login portal. It will seem like they are just being forced to re-authenticate and prevent them from watching you take the controls. If you mod the code, you could do some other fancy things with this general technique ;)

Take Over:

Allows you to step in and take control of a browser instance directly from the admin portal. To stop controlling the instance, hit ESCAPE key. Note, this will take the controls away from the phishing victim and they will be able to watch your movements if you do not boot them first. You have been warned.

Give Back Control:

Allows you to manually give the user back control of the automated browser instance. This could be useful for some social engineering scenarios when spoofing IT. You can tell the user you are starting a help session, take control and navigate to the target service, give back control and have them log in, take the controls again etc.

Get Cookies:

Extracts all cookie and local storage items from the browser instance, and downloads it as a JSON file. To inject this credential material back into a browser instance running on your local system, there is a script in the project called 'stealer.js'. It is meant to be run from your machine, and not the server, so to use it you will also need to install the Node components of the project on your system.

node stealer.js ~/Downloads/cuddle_asdf1234.json

Remove Instance:

Kills a browser instance when you don't need it. Sometimes users don't fully log you in. Sometimes the WebRTC connection fails. Sometimes a session times out before you can use it. In these cases, this button can help you clean up useless browser instances via the admin portal.

A note on keylogs and user data:

Each browser is spawned with its own random "browser id" and matching user data directory in the "user_data" folder of the project. In some cases where 'stealer.js' is not working, you may need to replicate the user data for that instance as well. This can be useful in cases targeting services with a "remember this browser" feature depending on how that feature is implemented.

There is also a keylog.txt in each user data directory with a full keylog of the victim user. The general keylog in the admin portal tries to account for things like backspaces, whereas this keylog.txt will have all recorded keystrokes.

Phishmonger Integration

Example pm.json:

{
  "tacking_id": "id",
  "logging_endpoint": "https://www.phishmongerserver.com/create_event",
  "admin_cookie": "admin_cookie=s3cret",
  "post_url_search": "ppsecure"
}

Under the hood

This tool works by pairing phishing site visitors with an automated Chrome browser, running on the phishing server. A video feed of the attacker-controlled Chrome instance is then streamed to the phishing victim over WebRTC, and all user-supplied mouse movements and keyboard inputs are forwarded on from the victim's browser to their associated Chrome instance. The server uses websockets to track victims, pair them with browsers, broker WebRTC video feeds, and man-in-the-middle user inputs. For each new visitor, the server spawns a new Chrome instance. Because we are using Chrome Devtools Protocol (CDP) to drive each Chrome instance, we can use APIs like "Storage.getCookie" to extract session cookies for target sites once the user has logged in for us. We can also step in at any time and directly drive each Chrome instance, leveraging the same method we use to give victims remote control in the first place.

The Node Server Performs the Following:

  • Starts a new browser ("empty phishbowl") with an xvfb instance as a virtual screen, and navigates a tab to the target login page
  • loads custom webpage, broadcast.html, with WebRTC setup script in a new tab on the automated browser
  • browser checks in over websockets
  • victim visits site, and checks in over websockets
  • pair victim with browser, broker WebRTC video stream over websockets, and spawn a new browser for the next victim
  • Browsers are tracked by a random ID to allow admins to "take over" a browser instance, or extract credential material from an instance.

Q and A

Why would you release such a dangerous thing? (AKA, that question my mom asks me every time I speak at Black Hat)

It is my understanding that this technique has been theorized and even weaponized for several years now (see shoutouts). So, while threat actors can leverage this technique, and probably have for some time, offensive security professionals have not had an easy way to replicate this technique and may even be unaware of its existence. My intent in releasing the tool is to allow penetration testers and red teamers to use BitM on operations to showcase its potential impact and help network defenders prepare for real threats.

How do I defend my service from this type of attack?

First, understand that this attack relies on social engineering a user into visiting a malicious website. Domain whitelisting would go a long way in preventing this and other types of social engineering. If we rely on users to manage 100% of the credential data (password, OTP, SMS, PhoneFactor, Push notification, etc.) for a web service, then we are potentially vulnerable to this attack. Therefore, to thwart this attack, we need to leverage credential data that users do not manage. For example, client TLS certificates can be issued to client devices, and will only be valid for the real web service. The cert is managed by the browser and operating system, and there is no way for an attacker's server to obtain a copy of the victim's TLS cert. Another option is to use U2F or FIDO2 with hardware like a YubiKey to manage some of the required credential data. There is no way for a hacker's website to interact with a YubiKey plugged into a victim's computer.

You use Docker for Caddy but not the Node server. What gives?

I'm not a Docker wiz (yet). If you can come up with a simple Dockerized setup, I'd really love a pull request.

What's with the silly name?

It's a play on Cuttlefish, a badass sea creature that can blend into its surroundings, Phishing, because it requires social engineering to perform the attack, and intentionally misspelled to be unique, playful, and silly. It makes me happy to think this funny tool name will be mentioned alongside critical-risk findings in pentest reports.

Shoutouts

While I came up with this technique and implementation independently, I have since learned that a couple other researchers beat me to the discovery. They each took an approach of using web-based VNC clients to achieve a similar outcome. It's an intuitive approach and might be applicable to performing MitM attacks against other software, not just browsers (VPN-in-the-browser maybe?). Definitely worth checking out:

Franco Tommasi, Christian Catalano & Ivan Taurino https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10207-021-00548-5

@mrd0x https://mrd0x.com/bypass-2fa-using-novnc/

Also, shoutout to Daniel Aaron @majordmg for helping with the early stages of WebRTC proof-of-concept.