@saintlessgirl: #BEAUTRIUM #BlurItFixIt #คอนซีลเลอร์เจ้านาง #เจ้านางไทยแลนด์

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Wednesday 04 March 2026 11:14:42 GMT
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geauty_
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ดีจิงน้าแม่เนียนมาก
2026-03-04 12:45:39
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bzbz_.eiei
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น่าร้ากกกก
2026-03-05 10:43:40
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geauty_
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วันนี้คุนใช้เจ้านางรึยังคะ
2026-03-04 12:44:41
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temmie.219
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2026-03-04 20:55:40
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a2994592xai
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2026-03-05 14:37:40
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idekmamypoko
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สาดไป
2026-03-04 12:36:41
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They didn’t crack the password. They didn’t need to. They logged in anyway.   What’s really happening here? Pass-the-Hash (PtH) attacks exploit a fundamental weakness in how authentication works inside many corporate networks—especially in Windows environments. Instead of stealing your actual password, attackers steal the *hash* of your password (a cryptographic representation stored in memory). And here’s the problem: in certain systems, that hash is enough to authenticate. No cracking. No guessing. Just reuse. How the attack unfolds (simplified): 1. Initial access    An attacker lands on a machine (phishing, malware, or exposed service). 2. Credential harvesting    They extract password hashes from memory (e.g., via tools like credential dumpers). 3. Lateral movement    Using the stolen hash, they authenticate to other systems—without ever knowing the plaintext password. 4. Privilege escalation    If an admin account is compromised, the attacker can move across the network rapidly. Why this is dangerous: * No need to decrypt passwords * Harder to detect with traditional login monitoring * Enables silent lateral movement across systems * Often bypasses basic security controls This is how attackers turn one compromised machine into full domain control. Real-world impact: Many major breaches didn’t start with sophisticated exploits— they escalated through techniques like Pass-the-Hash after initial access. Once inside, the network becomes a playground. How to defend against it: * Limit credential exposure: Avoid logging into multiple systems with high-privilege accounts * Use least privilege: Reduce admin rights wherever possible * Enable credential protections: Tools like Windows Defender Credential Guard * Implement network segmentation: Contain lateral movement * Monitor authentication anomalies: Especially unusual lateral logins * Use multi-factor authentication (MFA): Even internally where possible   Key takeaway: If an attacker gets your hash, they can become you— without ever knowing your password. Security isn’t just about keeping attackers out. It’s about controlling what they can do once they’re in. #Cybersecurity #EthicalHacking #InfoSec #SecurityAwareness
They didn’t crack the password. They didn’t need to. They logged in anyway. What’s really happening here? Pass-the-Hash (PtH) attacks exploit a fundamental weakness in how authentication works inside many corporate networks—especially in Windows environments. Instead of stealing your actual password, attackers steal the *hash* of your password (a cryptographic representation stored in memory). And here’s the problem: in certain systems, that hash is enough to authenticate. No cracking. No guessing. Just reuse. How the attack unfolds (simplified): 1. Initial access An attacker lands on a machine (phishing, malware, or exposed service). 2. Credential harvesting They extract password hashes from memory (e.g., via tools like credential dumpers). 3. Lateral movement Using the stolen hash, they authenticate to other systems—without ever knowing the plaintext password. 4. Privilege escalation If an admin account is compromised, the attacker can move across the network rapidly. Why this is dangerous: * No need to decrypt passwords * Harder to detect with traditional login monitoring * Enables silent lateral movement across systems * Often bypasses basic security controls This is how attackers turn one compromised machine into full domain control. Real-world impact: Many major breaches didn’t start with sophisticated exploits— they escalated through techniques like Pass-the-Hash after initial access. Once inside, the network becomes a playground. How to defend against it: * Limit credential exposure: Avoid logging into multiple systems with high-privilege accounts * Use least privilege: Reduce admin rights wherever possible * Enable credential protections: Tools like Windows Defender Credential Guard * Implement network segmentation: Contain lateral movement * Monitor authentication anomalies: Especially unusual lateral logins * Use multi-factor authentication (MFA): Even internally where possible Key takeaway: If an attacker gets your hash, they can become you— without ever knowing your password. Security isn’t just about keeping attackers out. It’s about controlling what they can do once they’re in. #Cybersecurity #EthicalHacking #InfoSec #SecurityAwareness

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