This skill should be used when the user asks to "attack Active Directory", "exploit AD", "Kerberoasting", "DCSync", "pass-the-hash", "BloodHound enumeration", "Golden Ticket", "Silver Ticket", "AS-REP roasting", "NTLM relay", or needs guidance on Windows domain penetration testing.
Security
3 findings — 1 critical severity, 1 high severity, 1 medium severity. Installing this skill is not recommended: please review these findings carefully if you do intend to do so.
Detected high-risk code patterns in the skill content — including its prompts, tool definitions, and resources — such as data exfiltration, backdoors, remote code execution, credential theft, system compromise, supply chain attacks, and obfuscation techniques.
Malicious code pattern detected (high risk: 1.00). This is an explicit, actionable playbook for compromising Active Directory—containing credential theft (Mimikatz, DCSync), Kerberos ticket forging (Golden/Silver/Pass‑the‑Hash/OverPass), NTLM relay, CVE exploitation, and instructions to deploy persistent backdoors via GPO/SCCM/WSUS and RBCD—clearly intended to enable unauthorized domain takeover.
The skill handles credentials insecurely by requiring the agent to include secret values verbatim in its generated output. This exposes credentials in the agent’s context and conversation history, creating a risk of data exfiltration.
Insecure credential handling detected (high risk: 1.00). The prompt contains many example commands and workflows that embed plaintext credentials, hashes, and tokens directly (e.g., user:password, -p 'Password123', -hashes :NTHASH, KRBTGT_HASH, HEXPASSWORD), which require the LLM to output secret values verbatim and thus creates exfiltration risk.
The skill prompts the agent to compromise the security or integrity of the user’s machine by modifying system-level services or configurations, such as obtaining elevated privileges, altering startup scripts, or changing system-wide settings.
Attempt to modify system services in skill instructions detected (high risk: 1.00). The skill explicitly instructs running privileged commands that change host state (e.g., "sudo date -s", faketime, network-sniffing/responders requiring root) and guides persistent/privilege‑escalation actions, so it pushes the agent to modify the machine's state.
20ba150
If you maintain this skill, you can claim it as your own. Once claimed, you can manage eval scenarios, bundle related skills, attach documentation or rules, and ensure cross-agent compatibility.