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Windows privilege escalation requires understanding tokens, services, and permissions. This lesson covers weak service permissions.
Access tokens forms the foundation of this topic. In real-world scenarios, attackers leverage this knowledge to identify weaknesses that defenders often overlook. Understanding how weak service permissions works at a fundamental level is essential before attempting any practical exercises.
Building on that foundation, windows services becomes critically important. Security professionals encounter this daily, and recognizing the patterns helps you work more efficiently during assessments.
UAC bypass represents another key consideration. Many beginners overlook this aspect, but experienced practitioners know it can make the difference between success and failure in real engagements.
Finally, token impersonation provides the practical context. Knowing when and how to apply these techniques separates theoretical knowledge from actionable skills.
For weak service permissions, professionals rely on WinPEAS, PowerUp, BeRoot, Seatbelt. The sandbox terminal on the right provides access to these tools. Familiarize yourself with their basic usage, then answer the questions below to complete this lesson.
What service misconfigurations exist?
What command lists Windows file permissions?
How do you modify a service binary?
What account typically runs privileged Windows services?
Found the flag? Submit it below to complete this lesson.
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