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Subject: Threat Hunting and Red Teaming clear filter
Thursday, September 10
 

8:00am CDT

CQURE Masterclass: System Forensics, Incident Handling & Threat Hunting
LIMITED
Thursday September 10, 2026 8:00am - Friday September 11, 2026 5:00pm CDT
Limited Capacity seats available
System Forensics followed by Threat Hunting and Incident Readiness are constantly evolving and crucial topics in the area of cybersecurity. In order to stay ahead of cyber-criminals, the knowledge of Individuals and Teams responsible for threat hunting, collecting digital evidence, and handling the incidents has to be constantly enhanced and updated.

This course offers a comprehensive, hands-on approach to mastering system forensics, incident handling, and threat hunting, equipping participants with the skills to detect, investigate, and respond to advanced cyber threats. Through case studies, practical labs, and real-world examples, participants will gain expertise in identifying and mitigating modern attacks across various environments. Key learning themes include:


1. Windows Internals & System Forensics: Understand Windows internals, including processes, threads, and permissions. Learn to gather volatile data, audit system configurations, and detect malicious or unnecessary services using tools like PowerShell


2. Malware Analysis and Incident Handling: Gain hands-on experience in analyzing malware, including static and behavioral techniques. Learn how to detect, contain, and eradicate malware, while mastering the steps for gathering evidence, preventing incidents, and recovering from attacks.


3. Network Forensics & Monitoring: Learn advanced network forensics techniques to detect data exfiltration, webshells, and lateral movement. Explore how to analyze network traffic, logs, and protocols to uncover attack indicators, and apply these skills to mitigate threats


4. Memory Forensics & Incident Response: learn how to analyze memory dumps with tools like Volatility. Understand how to detect malicious code and trace system compromises in memory, with practical examples from high-profile incidents.


5. Disk Forensics & Data Recovery: Master storage acquisition and disk forensics techniques, including image mounting, file system analysis, and recovering deleted data.


6. Advanced Threat Hunting & Detection: Develop advanced threat-hunting strategies to uncover hidden threats and internal reconnaissance. Use practical techniques for detecting privilege escalation, lateral movement, and other adversary tactics to proactively defend against advanced attacks.


This course is designed for professionals in digital forensics, incident response, and security operations who wish to deepen their expertise in modern threat detection and response. By combining in-depth technical knowledge with real-world training, participants will be equipped to effectively handle the evolving challenges in cybersecurity and incident management.


Prerequisites: To fully benefit from our masterclass System Forensics, Incident Handling and Threat Hunting, participants should have a solid background in identity management and a general understanding of IT security concepts. Skills in log analysis and a knowledge of authentication mechanisms will also be helpful. Intermediate participants will gain solid fundamentals, while advanced users can deepen their expertise and explore the latest techniques.
Trainers
avatar for Amr Thabet

Amr Thabet

Cybersecurity Expert, CQURE
Amr Thabet is a malware researcher and incident handler with over 16 years of experience, he worked in some of the Fortune 500 companies.  He is the founder of MalTrak and the author of "Mastering Malware Analysis" published by Packt Publishing. He is a speaker and an instructor... Read More →
avatar for Paula Januszkiewicz

Paula Januszkiewicz

CEO and Founder, Microsoft MVP and RD, CQURE
Paula Januszkiewicz is the Founder and CEO of CQURE and CQURE Academy, globally recognized organizations delivering cutting-edge cybersecurity consulting and advanced training since 2008. She is an Enterprise Security MVP, Microsoft Regional Director, and one of the world’s leading... Read More →
Thursday September 10, 2026 8:00am - Friday September 11, 2026 5:00pm CDT
Microsoft Technology Center (Aon Center)

8:00am CDT

Defending Enterprises - 2026 Edition
LIMITED
Thursday September 10, 2026 8:00am - Friday September 11, 2026 5:00pm CDT
Limited Capacity seats available
Updated for 2026, our immersive 2-day Defending Enterprises training is the natural counterpart to our popular Hacking Enterprises course.


Not only have several existing topics had major tweaks; the training includes an entirely new section on Entra ID and Azure cloud based attacks! 


You’ll play a SOC analyst in our Microsoft Sentinel cloud-based lab and try to rapidly locate IOA’s and IOC’s from a live enterprise breach executed by the trainers in real time.
Whether you’re new to Kusto Query Language (KQL) or a seasoned pro, there’s plenty for you in the 2-days! Yes, we’re using Microsoft Sentinel, but the underlying threat detection theory, logic and threat hunting approach is transferable into your own environments, whatever your preferred platform.


We look at the top 10+ methods we use in offensive engagements and show how these can be caught, along with numerous other examples and methods that go above and beyond these common TTPs!


This training goes beyond threat hunting as we peek into the world of detection engineering and the processes involved in converting logic into alerts!
With 14 hands-on exercises, many of which also featuring extra time and bonus content, you’ll gain real-world experience in the following areas:


* Introduction to Kusto Query Language (KQL)
* Reviewing popular phishing attacks and living off the land techniques
* Locating C2 traffic and beaconing activity
* Detecting persistence activities
* Digging into credential exploitation (Kerberoasting, Pass-the-Hash, Pass-the-Ticket, DCSync)
* Reviewing Active Directory Certificate Services (AD CS) attacks
* Identifying lateral movement (WinRM, SMB)
* Cloud Attacks (Entra ID Enumeration, Azure IMDS, Authentication Tokens, Conditional Access, App Registrations)
* + much more!


We know 2 days isn't a lot of time, so you'll also get 14-days FREE lab time after class and Discord access for support.

Prerequisites: Detection methods will be taught during training, however an understanding of KQL concepts would be beneficial, and previous SOC experience and/or pentesting is advantageous but not required.
Trainers
avatar for Jeroen

Jeroen "Jay" Hoof

Instructor, SANS
Jeroen Hoof is a SANS Certified Instructor Candidate for SEC504: Hacker Tools, Techniques, and Incident Handling and a Security Operations Specialist at Davinsi Labs, where he specializes in intrusion analysis, SOC operations and detection engineering. With a career spanning law enforcement investigations, SOC operations, and cyber breach response, Jeroen brings a practitioner’s perspective... Read More →
avatar for Owen Shearing

Owen Shearing

Director, In.security
Owen (@rebootuser) is a co-founder of In.security, a specialist cyber security consultancy offering technical and training services based in the UK. He has a strong background in networking and IT infrastructure, with well over two decades of experience in technical security roles... Read More →
Thursday September 10, 2026 8:00am - Friday September 11, 2026 5:00pm CDT
Microsoft Technology Center (Aon Center)

8:01am CDT

Offense for Defense
LIMITED
Thursday September 10, 2026 8:01am - Friday September 11, 2026 5:00pm CDT
Limited Capacity seats available
Join us for Offense for Defense, a high-impact, hands-on cybersecurity course built specifically for blue team professionals, systems administrators, SOC analysts, threat hunters, and incident responders. This training arms defenders with the tactics, tools, and mindset of attackers, empowering teams to proactively identify weaknesses and design better protections, detections, and responses. All while learning from one of the most prominent names in cybersecurity instruction and enterprise penetration testing.

Prerequisites: A couple of years in IT
Trainers
avatar for Tim Medin

Tim Medin

CEO, Red Siege
Tim is the CEO and founder of Red Siege Information Security. He is the creator of the Kerberoasting. Tim was a Senior Instructor and course author (SEC560) at The SANS Institute. Tim has performed penetration tests on a wide range of organizations and technologies. Tim is an experienced... Read More →
Thursday September 10, 2026 8:01am - Friday September 11, 2026 5:00pm CDT
Microsoft Technology Center (Aon Center)
 
Saturday, September 12
 

10:30am CDT

400 Detections, Zero Alerts: Why your Detection Program is flying blind
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
You have 400 detection rules in production. Your ATT&CK coverage heatmap looks great in a board deck. But how many of those rules actually fire when the technique executes today, not when they were written 18 months ago?
If you can't answer that, you don't have coverage. You have promises.
This talk tackles the gap between deploying detections and proving they work. Detection rules silently break all the time. Schema changes, parser updates, log source drift, over-tuning. Nobody notices because false negatives are completely invisible. No one complains when an alert doesn't fire. You only find out during an incident review or a red team engagement, and by then it's too late. Most detection engineering content focuses on writing better rules or building more coverage, but almost nobody is asking the harder question: how do you know the rules you already wrote still work?
The answer is detection regression testing: running known-good attack simulations against deployed rules on a continuous, automated basis and alerting when they stop firing. This session walks through an open-source pipeline (sigma-regression-testing on GitHub) that automates the full lifecycle. Write vendor-agnostic Sigma detections. Convert and deploy to Splunk via REST API. Map each rule to a specific Atomic Red Team test. Run automated suites that produce pass/fail reports. Every step runs in GitHub Actions CI/CD with zero manual intervention after a detection merges.
Beyond the tooling, this talk introduces detection SLAs: measurable commitments like "this rule fires within 5 minutes of execution" and "100% of Priority 1 ATT&CK techniques have a passing regression test at all times." They transform detection programs from vague coverage claims into defensible, auditable engineering practices.
Attendees will leave with a working framework they can clone and deploy immediately, along with a concrete methodology for measuring detection health and identifying blind spots. Everything shown is running in production. The code is public. The pipeline is real.


Speakers
avatar for Tyler Casey

Tyler Casey

Detection Engineer, SCYTHE
Tyler Casey is a seasoned Cyber Professional with over a decade of experience in Defensive Cyber Operations (DCO). Currently serving as Lead Detection Engineer and Deputy of SCYTHE Labs at SCYTHE, Tyler specializes in developing and implementing robust defensive cybersecurity measures... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA
  Talk

10:30am CDT

Active Directory Post-Mortem: Assumptions vs Reality
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Active Directory Domain Services has been around for 26 years, making it far from a young technology - yet it is not going anywhere anytime soon. Most companies still rely on Active Directory as their primary identity provider and management solution. One might assume that after all these years we have already mastered securing Active Directory with best practices. However, the reality is often the opposite: many AD environments are still poorly secured, which keeps them a common target for attackers.
In this talk, I will demonstrate three important vulnerabilities that still exist in Active Directory and are either unknown or not discussed enough. We will challenge a few assumptions along the way:
  • If an account is locked out, can you still brute-force its password?
  • If a user is in Protected Users, is the NT hash truly out of reach?
  • When you use RDP (MSTSC), does it cache more than just fragments of your screen?
By the end of the session, you will learn that some common assumptions are wrong and that you must always test and verify security controls in practice. You will also leave with practical mitigations and best practices to secure your environment against these vulnerabilities and reduce their impact.
Speakers
avatar for David Horak

David Horak

Security Engineer & Founder, Horizon Secured
David Horák is a System Security Engineer and Team Leader with 8+ years of experience securing Windows infrastructures and Active Directory. He has delivered 30+ security assessments across SMB, enterprise, and critical infrastructure, giving him a strong perspective on what security... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA

10:30am CDT

Breaking Identity at Scale: From DPAPI & TBAL Secrets to Full Domain Compromise
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Modern enterprise environments continue to rely on implicit trust within identity and credential protection mechanisms such as DPAPI, DPAPI-NG, and token-based authentication layers. While these technologies are designed to safeguard secrets, they also introduce powerful attack surfaces when combined with misconfigurations, weak privilege boundaries, and overlooked trust relationships.


This session presents a deep technical exploration of how attackers extract and abuse protected credentials at scale, moving from local access to full domain compromise. We demonstrate novel techniques for decrypting DPAPI-protected data, abusing TBAL-related key material, and chaining these with authentication protocol weaknesses such as NTLM and Kerberos to achieve lateral movement and privilege escalation.


Unlike traditional approaches that focus on single techniques, this research connects multiple layers of identity abuse into a cohesive attack path observed in real-world environments. Attendees will see how seemingly isolated weaknesses: credential storage, token handling, and protocol trust, combine into high-impact attack chains.


The session also provides defensive strategies, including detection opportunities, hardening approaches, and architectural changes to reduce reliance on implicit trust. The goal is to shift defenders from reactive detection to proactive identity security design.
Speakers
avatar for Paula Januszkiewicz

Paula Januszkiewicz

CEO and Founder, Microsoft MVP and RD, CQURE
Paula Januszkiewicz is the Founder and CEO of CQURE and CQURE Academy, globally recognized organizations delivering cutting-edge cybersecurity consulting and advanced training since 2008. She is an Enterprise Security MVP, Microsoft Regional Director, and one of the world’s leading... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA
  Talk

10:30am CDT

Containers Don't Lie. But Your Security Tooling Might Be Missing What They're Saying
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Container security is one of those topics that sounds solved. We've got image scanning. We've got runtime policies. We've got Kubernetes RBAC. So why are containers still showing up as the initial access vector in breach reports year after year?


Because most of our tooling is looking at the wrong things at the wrong time.


This talk is about shifting container threat hunting from reactive to genuinely proactive, not by buying another tool, but by understanding what behavioral signals containers are already producing and building detection logic around those signals.


I've spent years running Kubernetes at scale in production environments, managing security for platforms that can't afford downtime and can't afford breaches. What I've learned is that containers are actually quite chatty. Syscall patterns, network connection behavior, image layer anomalies, runtime drift. They tell a story. The problem is most teams aren't set up to read it.


In this session, I'll cover:


- The most common gaps between what container scanning tools report and what's actually happening at runtime
- Behavioral indicators that predict compromise before it escalates, drawn from real incident data
- How to build a lightweight threat hunting workflow using open-source tooling (Falco, eBPF-based detection, and custom OPA policies) that doesn't require a six-figure budget
- A demo of an open-source AI-powered Docker security analyzer showing how AI-assisted analysis can surface vulnerabilities that static scanners consistently miss


The demo portion will be hands-on. We'll start with a "clean" container environment that passes standard scanning, introduce an attack scenario, and then walk through how behavioral hunting catches what the scanners don't.


By the end, you'll have a practical hunting framework, a set of detection rules you can implement immediately, and a better mental model for where container defenses actually break down in the real world.


This is for defenders who are tired of being told their container stack is secure, and then watching alerts prove otherwise.
Speakers
avatar for Advait Patel

Advait Patel

Senior Site Reliability Engineer, Broadcom
Advait Patel is a Senior Site Reliability Engineer at Broadcom with experienced in securing large-scale cloud platforms across AWS and GCP. He holds an MS in Computer Science from DePaul University and is a Docker Captain and Google Developer Expert in Google Cloud.
Advait is an active contributor to the security community as a founding member of the OWASP AI Vulnerability Scoring System (AIVSS), creator of the OWASP-adopted open-source tool DockSec, and co-author of cloud security guidelines for CSA. He has authored two Springer books on GCP... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA
  Talk

10:30am CDT

Designing deception in GCP: what’s effective density?
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Defenders have deployed honeypots and honeytokens to detect threats targeting GCP workloads. The dynamic and ephemeral nature of cloud workloads with the resource-based policy model in GCP introduces unique characteristics that influence the design of deception. Defenders need to determine answers to questions such as: how many deceptions to deploy, what should they represent, how many of each type, how should these be named, where should the deceptions be placed? This session provides real-world insights from a security practitioner on the design of a deception strategy for cloud workloads that spans honeytokens (GCP IAM service accounts, GKE service accounts) and honeypots (compute instances, storage, pods).
Speakers
avatar for Suril Desai

Suril Desai

VP Engineering, Acalvio
Suril is VP Engineering and Security SME at Acalvio. Suril has deep domain expertise in cybersecurity and has a strong academic and industry background in Computer Science. Suril holds several patents.
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA
  Talk

10:30am CDT

Detection Engineering for AI Agents: Building Defenses That Work When Your Attacker Can Think
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
The bot detection playbook defenders have relied on for years — IP blocklists, rate limits, behavioral baselines, CAPTCHA — was built for a threat that no longer exists. Modern adversaries are deploying LLM-powered agents that reason, adapt, and evolve their behavior in response to detection. For defenders, this means the threat model has fundamentally changed.   This talk, drawn from production experience building bot mitigation systems at Amazon, provides blue teamers with a practical framework for detection engineering against agentic AI attackers. The session covers: how to identify the behavioral signatures of LLM-driven agents (and why they're different from both humans and traditional bots); detection signal categories that remain robust against adaptive adversaries; pipeline architecture for high-velocity threat detection at scale; and incident response workflows when an AI-powered attacker is actively evading your controls.   Critically, this talk addresses the strategic challenge defenders face: in an adversarial ML environment, your model is always at risk of being reverse-engineered and evaded. How do you build detection systems that are robust to an adversary who can iterate as fast as you can? Attendees will leave with detection engineering patterns they can apply to bot defense, fraud prevention, and automated threat response — and a realistic understanding of where current defenses still have gaps.
Speakers
avatar for Shashwat Jain

Shashwat Jain

Sr. Software Development Engineer, Amazon
Shashwat Jain is a Senior Software Development Engineer at Amazon, where he architects and deploys AI-powered bot mitigation systems protecting Amazon's global e-commerce platforms from sophisticated automated threats. With expertise spanning real-time behavioral detection engines... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA
  Talk

10:30am CDT

Entra the Dragon: Entra ID Red vs Blue
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Entra ID is the identity & access management system for the Microsoft cloud. Microsoft continues to add new features to Entra ID and many of these features provide attack capability. There are many moving parts and regular updates that requires attention to stay secure. This talk covers the latest attacks against the Microsoft cloud from phishing to account take-over to persistence as well as the best ways to defend against them. So go beyond Secure Score and level up your cloud security!
Speakers
avatar for Sean Metcalf

Sean Metcalf

Identity Security Architect, TrustedSec
Sean Metcalf  (@PyroTek3) is an Identity Security Architect with TrustedSec. He is one of about 100 people in the world who holds the Microsoft Certified Master Directory Services (MCM) Active Directory certification and is a former Microsoft MVP. Sean has presented on Active Directory... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA

10:30am CDT

From Compliance to Covert Ops: Demystifying the Offensive Security Landscape
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
The most critical stage when using offensive security to improve defenses comes after obtaining leadership approval for a testing exercise. Current industry definitions have significant overlap, with the same term used to describe different underlying services, and with the added complication of AI-based offensive tools. Overshadowed by years’ worth of penetration tests exploiting the same set of techniques, or red teamers waltzing through the front door, driving lasting and impactful security improvements based on testing results continues to become less straightforward.


As an industry, we have accepted that using offensive testing is a good way to find gaps in our defenses. However, less attention is given to whether the type of testing chosen actually helps to systematically fix the gaps identified. This leads to problems like:
  1. Penetration tests continuing to surface the same class of findings as previous years, or the same finding in a different location.
  2. Organizations paying for advanced red team exercises while not having implemented foundational security controls.
The types of problems mentioned above arise because defenders often select offensive testing solutions based on the service "name". This leads to a mismatch between the type of offensive testing conducted and the defensive technologies that need to be validated. 


In this session, I will first provide a framework for defenders to categorize types of offensive security testing based on what their security controls will be tested against (attacks vs. adversaries) and how they will be tested (emulation vs. simulation). This framework helps defenders to:
  1. Understand what the core value proposition of each offensive security service is, independent of what terminology is used to describe it.
  2. Work bottom-up from the defenses you have to identify the most appropriate testing methodology.
Next, I will demonstrate how to use this model within attendees’ organizations to plan out an offensive testing program based on their threat model, security goals, and maturity. 


The goal of this session is to encourage attendees to think about offensive security from a new standpoint. By introducing a framework to categorize offensive testing methodologies with a primary focus on the security controls being validated, defenders will understand how to distinguish between the various offensive security services on the market, select the most appropriate solution for their organization, and progress between offerings as their security program matures.
Speakers
avatar for Sandun Bambarandage

Sandun Bambarandage

Service Lead, Breach & Attack Simulation, LevelBlue
Sandun is a Senior Consultant within the Security Advisory Services team at LevelBlue. He currently leads the Breach and Attack Simulation program, using atomic simulations of adversarial techniques at scale to validate the effectiveness of security tools and system configuration... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA
  Talk

10:30am CDT

Reconstructing Reality: Advanced USN Journal Extraction and Full-Fidelity Correlation with MFT
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
The NTFS USN Journal remains one of the most underutilized yet powerful forensic artifacts in Windows environments. While widely known, its practical use is often limited by incomplete parsing, lack of context, and the inability to correlate it effectively with other filesystem structures such as the Master File Table.
This session challenges long standing forensic assumptions about how filesystem evidence should be interpreted. Traditional approaches treat artifacts such as the USN Journal and the Master File Table as separate and partially reliable sources of truth. Our research demonstrates that this model is fundamentally flawed.
Many widely used forensic tools silently ignore critical fields, leading to incomplete or misleading conclusions. As a result, investigators often rely on partial visibility when reconstructing attacker activity.
We introduce a comprehensive approach to extracting, parsing, and operationalizing USN Journal data at scale, using full field analysis to reconstruct detailed file system activity. A key contribution of this work is a novel correlation model between USN Journal entries and Master File Table records, enabling investigators to rebuild complete timelines with significantly higher accuracy.
By combining these artifacts and analyzing all available metadata, we show that it is possible to detect inconsistencies, uncover hidden attacker activity, and validate events that would otherwise remain ambiguous or invisible.
This approach redefines how filesystem forensics should be performed, transforming fragmented artifacts into a unified and reliable representation of system activity. The techniques presented are actively used in real world incident response and threat hunting engagements, where precision and speed are critical.
Speakers
avatar for Paula Januszkiewicz

Paula Januszkiewicz

CEO and Founder, Microsoft MVP and RD, CQURE
Paula Januszkiewicz is the Founder and CEO of CQURE and CQURE Academy, globally recognized organizations delivering cutting-edge cybersecurity consulting and advanced training since 2008. She is an Enterprise Security MVP, Microsoft Regional Director, and one of the world’s leading... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA
  Talk

10:30am CDT

Trusted, But Dangerous: Identity Abuse Through First-Party Apps in Entra
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Microsoft Entra environments rely heavily on implicit trust in Microsoft first-party applications, yet most defenders have limited visibility into how expansive that trust boundary truly is. With more than 4,000 Microsoft first-party app IDs, many operate as “ghost” applications: active in authentication and token issuance, but not clearly represented in enterprise application views or routinely monitored by defenders. This creates a significant blind spot in identity security.
This session explores how these trusted applications can be abused through Resource Owner Password Credentials (ROPC), Family of Client IDs (FOCI), and token issuance behaviors that extend access beyond what defenders typically expect. Rather than focusing on generic anomalous sign-ins, the talk centers on capability: the delegated scopes these applications request, the permissions they inherit, and how those access paths can be leveraged to persist and expand access within a tenant. These behaviors can be executed through standard Graph API interactions and demonstrate how ROPC can be leveraged to obtain tokens without interactive authentication and, in many real-world environments aligned with historical Microsoft guidance, results in effective MFA bypass conditions.
Attendees will learn how ROPC remains relevant in modern identity attacks, how first-party application trust complicates Conditional Access enforcement, and why policy evaluation differs between interactive and non-interactive authentication paths. The session also examines token lifecycle in depth, including how refresh tokens can persist for extended periods, how Continuous Access Evaluation (CAE) impacts enforcement, and why resetting user credentials does not necessarily revoke active access without additional token invalidation steps.
From a defensive perspective, this talk provides practical, immediately usable guidance. It includes KQL queries specifically designed to identify ROPC authentication activity, enumerate first-party application usage, and help defenders understand which client applications are requesting access and with what scope. It also covers Conditional Access policy considerations, validation techniques, and response actions to take during identity incidents involving token abuse.
A companion GitHub repository is included with ready-to-use KQL queries, detection logic, and example configurations. Attendees will leave with a concrete understanding of how first-party application trust can be abused, where visibility and enforcement gaps exist, and how to build effective identity-focused detection and response workflows in Microsoft Entra.
Speakers
avatar for Jon Haas

Jon Haas

Threat Hunter, Nationwide
Jon Haas is a Threat Hunter at Nationwide specializing in identity security, cloud detection engineering, and adversary tradecraft in modern SaaS environments. His work focuses on uncovering gaps in authentication controls, including OAuth abuse, first party application behavior... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA

10:30am CDT

Using Pentest Findings to Improve Detections
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Most penetration test reports get filed and forgotten. SOC teams never confirm whether their alerts fired during the engagement, and adversaries keep reusing the same techniques. This session shows blue teamers how to digest a penetration test report and turn every pentest finding into a working detection.
We'll break down pentest reports from the SOC's perspective, focusing on the methodology sections where attacker behavior is documented with command line invocations, tooling, and attack narratives. We'll cover what artifacts to require from testers before the engagement begins, including timestamped command logs, source and target IPs, compromised accounts, and MITRE ATT&CK technique IDs.
Attendees will leave with a repeatable feedback loop for transforming pentest results into measurable detection improvements, supported by tools like Sigma, Atomic Red Team, VECTR, and Caldera.
Speakers
avatar for Ashley Knowles

Ashley Knowles

Cyber Security Analyst, Black Hills Information Security
As a Security Consultant, Ashley’s role is to perform network (internal/external), social engineering, and cloud penetration tests, as well as participating in red team assessments. Since joining the infosec community in 2013, she has developed and taught hacking classes, worked... Read More →
Saturday September 12, 2026 10:30am - 11:30am CDT
Swissôtel Chicago 323 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601, USA
 
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