mirror of
https://github.com/mukul975/Anthropic-Cybersecurity-Skills.git
synced 2026-06-15 23:44:56 +03:00
efca3ec611
Mapped every skill to NIST CSF 2.0 subcategory IDs (GV/ID/PR/DE/RS/RC functions) based on subdomain and content analysis. Restores 11 skills corrupted during prior rebase, re-enriching with ATLAS, D3FEND, NIST AI RMF, and CSF 2.0 fields. All 754 skills now carry structured mappings for all 5 security frameworks: - MITRE ATT&CK (in tags) - MITRE ATLAS v5.5 (atlas_techniques) - MITRE D3FEND v1.3 (d3fend_techniques) - NIST AI RMF 1.0 (nist_ai_rmf) - NIST CSF 2.0 (nist_csf)
144 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
144 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
---
|
|
name: collecting-open-source-intelligence
|
|
description: 'Collects and synthesizes open-source intelligence (OSINT) about threat actors, malicious infrastructure, and
|
|
attack campaigns using publicly available data sources, passive reconnaissance tools, and dark web monitoring. Use when
|
|
investigating external threat actor infrastructure, performing pre-engagement reconnaissance for authorized red team assessments,
|
|
or enriching CTI reports with publicly available adversary context. Activates for requests involving Maltego, Shodan, OSINT
|
|
framework, SpiderFoot, or infrastructure reconnaissance.
|
|
|
|
'
|
|
domain: cybersecurity
|
|
subdomain: threat-intelligence
|
|
tags:
|
|
- OSINT
|
|
- Maltego
|
|
- Shodan
|
|
- Recon-ng
|
|
- SpiderFoot
|
|
- threat-intelligence
|
|
- ATT&CK-T1591
|
|
- NIST-CSF
|
|
version: 1.0.0
|
|
author: mahipal
|
|
license: Apache-2.0
|
|
nist_csf:
|
|
- ID.RA-01
|
|
- ID.RA-05
|
|
- DE.CM-01
|
|
- DE.AE-02
|
|
---
|
|
# Collecting Open-Source Intelligence
|
|
|
|
## When to Use
|
|
|
|
Use this skill when:
|
|
- Investigating external infrastructure associated with a phishing campaign targeting your organization
|
|
- Enriching threat actor profiles with publicly observable indicators (WHOIS, ASN data, SSL certificates)
|
|
- Conducting authorized attack surface discovery to understand your organization's external exposure
|
|
|
|
**Do not use** this skill for active scanning against targets without explicit written authorization — OSINT collection must remain passive (no packets sent to target systems) unless scope permits active recon.
|
|
|
|
## Prerequisites
|
|
|
|
- Maltego CE or commercial license for graph-based link analysis
|
|
- Shodan API key (https://shodan.io) for internet-wide device/service discovery
|
|
- OSINT Framework familiarity (https://osintframework.com) for tool selection
|
|
- SpiderFoot HX or open-source SpiderFoot for automated OSINT correlation
|
|
|
|
## Workflow
|
|
|
|
### Step 1: Define Collection Requirements
|
|
|
|
Establish the intelligence requirement (IR) before collecting. Document:
|
|
- Target: threat actor group, malicious domain, IP range, or organization
|
|
- Priority Intelligence Requirements (PIRs): What specific questions need answering?
|
|
- Legal authority: Passive OSINT is legal; active probing requires authorization
|
|
- Data handling: TLP classification for collected intelligence
|
|
|
|
### Step 2: Passive DNS and WHOIS Investigation
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
# Passive DNS via SecurityTrails API
|
|
curl "https://api.securitytrails.com/v1/domain/evil-domain.com/dns/a" \
|
|
-H "apikey: YOUR_KEY"
|
|
|
|
# WHOIS history via ARIN / RIPE
|
|
whois -h whois.arin.net evil-domain.com
|
|
|
|
# Certificate transparency logs (no API key required)
|
|
curl "https://crt.sh/?q=%.evil-domain.com&output=json" | jq '.[].name_value'
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Certificate transparency logs reveal all subdomains for a target domain, often exposing staging, VPN, or internal infrastructure inadvertently made public.
|
|
|
|
### Step 3: Shodan Infrastructure Mapping
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
import shodan
|
|
|
|
api = shodan.Shodan("YOUR_SHODAN_API_KEY")
|
|
|
|
# Search for specific C2 framework signatures (Cobalt Strike beacon)
|
|
results = api.search('product:"Cobalt Strike" port:443')
|
|
for r in results['matches']:
|
|
print(r['ip_str'], r['port'], r['org'], r.get('ssl', {}).get('cert', {}).get('subject', ''))
|
|
|
|
# Find infrastructure associated with a known threat actor's ASN
|
|
results = api.search('asn:AS12345 http.title:"Redirector"')
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Correlate Shodan results with passive DNS to build infrastructure clusters.
|
|
|
|
### Step 4: Maltego Graph Analysis
|
|
|
|
In Maltego, use these built-in transforms for threat actor infrastructure mapping:
|
|
1. Start with a known malicious domain (Entity: Domain)
|
|
2. Run "To IP Address [DNS]" → identifies hosting IPs
|
|
3. Run "To Shared Hosting" → identifies co-hosted domains (potentially same threat actor)
|
|
4. Run "To DNS Name [Reverse DNS]" → identifies PTR records
|
|
5. Run "To Whois" → identifies registrant email/organization
|
|
6. Pivot on registrant email → "To Domains [Registrant Email]" → expands to all domains registered with same email
|
|
|
|
Maltego Maltego Cyber threat intelligence transforms (VirusTotal, Shodan, PassiveTotal, URLScan) extend graph coverage.
|
|
|
|
### Step 5: Dark Web and Paste Site Monitoring
|
|
|
|
Use SpiderFoot HX or manual searches for:
|
|
- Paste sites (Pastebin, Ghostbin): search for leaked credentials, IOCs, malware configs
|
|
- Dark web forums: via Tor browser with appropriate operational security
|
|
- GitHub/GitLab: search for exposed credentials or organization-specific strings
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
# SpiderFoot CLI for automated OSINT
|
|
python sf.py -s evil-domain.com -m sfp_shodan,sfp_virustotal,sfp_passivetotal \
|
|
-o TF -R result.json
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Key Concepts
|
|
|
|
| Term | Definition |
|
|
|------|-----------|
|
|
| **Passive OSINT** | Intelligence collection that does not send any packets to target systems — uses public databases, search engines, cached data |
|
|
| **PIR** | Priority Intelligence Requirement — specific question the intelligence collection must answer, preventing unfocused data gathering |
|
|
| **Certificate Transparency** | Public log of all SSL/TLS certificates issued by CAs, enabling discovery of subdomains via crt.sh |
|
|
| **Pivoting** | Using one data point (IP, email, registrant name) to discover related infrastructure or accounts |
|
|
| **ASN** | Autonomous System Number — block of IP addresses under a single routing policy; useful for clustering threat actor infrastructure |
|
|
| **Co-hosted Domains** | Multiple domains resolving to the same IP, potentially indicating shared attacker infrastructure |
|
|
|
|
## Tools & Systems
|
|
|
|
- **Maltego**: Graph-based link analysis platform with 50+ data source transforms for IP, domain, email, and social media analysis
|
|
- **Shodan**: Internet-wide scanner database with 1B+ indexed devices; supports banner, port, SSL certificate, and vulnerability searches
|
|
- **SpiderFoot**: Automated OSINT tool with 200+ modules covering DNS, WHOIS, dark web, breach data, and social media
|
|
- **Recon-ng**: Python-based OSINT framework with modular design for domain, email, and social media reconnaissance
|
|
- **crt.sh**: Free certificate transparency search engine for subdomain and certificate discovery
|
|
- **OSINT Framework (osintframework.com)**: Curated directory of OSINT tools organized by intelligence category
|
|
|
|
## Common Pitfalls
|
|
|
|
- **Leaving digital footprints**: Visiting a threat actor's website or Shodan-queried IP can alert the adversary. Use Tor or VPN with a dedicated OSINT VM.
|
|
- **Confirmation bias in graph analysis**: Maltego graphs can create false connections. Verify each pivot independently before treating as confirmed.
|
|
- **Outdated data**: WHOIS privacy services and bulletproof hosting rotate frequently. Always check data timestamps — 6-month-old passive DNS may no longer be valid.
|
|
- **Attribution overconfidence**: Infrastructure overlap does not guarantee same threat actor. False flag operations deliberately share indicators across groups.
|
|
- **Legal boundaries**: Some OSINT tools perform active scans (port scanning, banner grabbing). Confirm tool behavior before use against external targets without authorization.
|