Services File Permissions Weakness (T1574.010)

Tactic: stealth, Execution

Tactics
stealth , Execution
Platforms
Windows
Reference
attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1574.010

Description

Adversaries may execute their own malicious payloads by hijacking the binaries used by services. Adversaries may use flaws in the permissions of Windows services to replace the binary that is executed upon service start. These service processes may automatically execute specific binaries as part of their functionality or to perform other actions. If the permissions on the file system directory containing a target binary, or permissions on the binary itself are improperly set, then the target binary may be overwritten with another binary using user-level permissions and executed by the original process. If the original process and thread are running under a higher permissions level, then the replaced binary will also execute under higher-level permissions, which could include SYSTEM.

Adversaries may use this technique to replace legitimate binaries with malicious ones as a means of executing code at a higher permissions level. If the executing process is set to run at a specific time or during a certain event (e.g., system bootup) then this technique can also be used for persistence.

How GTK Cyber trains on this

GTK Cyber's Threat Hunting with Data Science course teaches you to build machine-learning detections for techniques like this across the MITRE ATT&CK framework, including the stealth, Execution tactic this technique falls under. Practitioner-led, focused on real detections, not memorizing technique IDs.

Threat Hunting with Data Science → · All training courses

Related techniques

Train your team to detect attacks like this.

GTK Cyber's Threat Hunting with Data Science course is taught by practitioners who detect this stuff for a living.

Explore Threat Hunting Training