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Decepticon
Decepticon contém 269 skills coletadas de PurpleAILAB, com cobertura ocupacional por repositório e páginas de detalhe dentro do site.
Skills neste repositório
Drive Decepticon — an autonomous multi-agent red-team framework — over MCP to run authorized penetration tests and bug-bounty engagements end to end, then watch and steer them live from chat. Launch an engagement against a target, poll its transcript to narrate progress, send messages to refocus it, and pull findings as SARIF. Use when the user asks to run a pentest/red-team engagement, hunt a bug bounty, do recon, exploit/scan a host, web app, API, network, cloud, Active Directory, mobile app, or smart contract WITH Decepticon — or to check/resume a running engagement or report what Decepticon found. Triggers: run a decepticon engagement, pentest this with decepticon, bug bounty, recon this target, red team this, scan this host, resume the engagement, what did decepticon find, decepticon status. Do NOT use for ad-hoc local tool runs (running nmap/sqlmap/ffuf directly) when no Decepticon server is involved — this drives the Decepticon orchestrator, not raw tools.
IoT device security reconnaissance — firmware extraction, embedded analysis, protocol identification, default credential checking, vulnerability scanning, device fingerprinting.
Mobile application security reconnaissance — APK/IPA analysis, permission enumeration, certificate validation, hardcoded secret detection, insecure storage identification, network security analysis.
Wireless network security reconnaissance — WiFi analysis, Bluetooth assessment, RFID/NFC evaluation, signal capture, protocol analysis, encryption testing, rogue device detection.
Operational-tier finding template — minimal fields for sub-agent decision support. Heavyweight deliverable promotion lives in skills/decepticon/final-report.
Red team engagement lifecycle management — initiation, phase transitions, go/no-go gates, deconfliction, emergency procedures, completion.
Final engagement report generation — executive summary, technical report, findings aggregation, attack path narrative, detection gap matrix, remediation roadmap.
Decepticon orchestrator patterns — delegation, state management, adaptive re-planning, context handoff protocols.
Exploitation finding documentation — initial access reports, exploit chain documentation, CVSS v4.0 scoring, shell/credential inventory, detection gap analysis.
Post-exploitation finding documentation — credential access, privilege escalation, lateral movement reports, detection gap analysis, attack path documentation, CVSS v4.0 scoring.
Recon output formatting — report structure, CVSS v4.0 scoring (primary), MITRE ATT&CK mapping, finding prioritization, Markdown output, detection gap tracking, handoff checklists.
Concept of Operations document creation — executive summary, threat actor profiling, attack narrative, kill chain design, communication plan, deconfliction.
Convert engagement documents into machine-readable OPPLAN for the ralph loop — objective decomposition, acceptance criteria, MITRE mapping, priority ordering.
Rules of Engagement document creation — scope definition, prohibited/permitted actions, testing windows, escalation contacts, incident procedures.
Author and deploy an evilginx2 phishlet to reverse-proxy a real login and capture the post-authentication session cookie, defeating MFA via session-token theft.
Build and launch a tracked phishing campaign with the GoPhish REST API — sending profile, groups, email template, landing page, launch, and event polling.
Register and provision a lookalike / Punycode phishing domain with DNS and TLS so GoPhish and evilginx2 lures resolve and pass modern mail + browser checks.
Harvest and replay O365 / Entra ID access via the OAuth device-code flow and captured tokens (TokenTactics-style), skipping the password + MFA prompts.
Design a credible phishing pretext and target shortlist from OSINT before any campaign is built — sender persona, scenario, timing, and the minimal target set.
Phishing / social-engineering catalog for the Phisher agent. Use ONLY when the engagement RoE authorizes a phishing engagement. Covers pretext design, GoPhish campaigns, evilginx2 MFA-bypass proxying, O365 credential/token harvest, lookalike domains, and the mandatory blue-team deconfliction handshake.
APT29 (Cozy Bear / Midnight Blizzard, SVR) adversary-emulation playbook — malware-light cloud-identity espionage: no-MFA password spray, OAuth consent/token abuse, Golden SAML, mailbox collection over residential proxies. Use when emulating APT29 against an M365/Entra/AWS-identity estate. Triggers on: 'emulate APT29', 'Cozy Bear', 'Midnight Blizzard', 'NOBELIUM', 'OAuth abuse', 'cloud identity espionage', 'Golden SAML'.
FIN7 (Carbon Spider / Sangria Tempest) adversary-emulation playbook — revenue-targeted spearphishing with phone follow-up, EDR-evasion tradecraft, AD compromise, and big-game-hunting ransomware. Use when emulating a high-end financially-motivated crew that graduated from POS theft to ransomware. Triggers on: 'emulate FIN7', 'Carbanak', 'Carbon Spider', 'Sangria Tempest', 'big game hunting', 'EDR evasion', 'AvNeutralizer'.
Lazarus Group (Hidden Cobra, DPRK RGB) adversary-emulation playbook — financially-motivated crypto/DeFi theft and supply-chain intrusion: fake-job social engineering, trojanized apps, wallet/key theft, and on-chain DeFi/bridge exploitation (testnet/fork only). Use when emulating DPRK financial actors against a crypto/exchange/DeFi target. Triggers on: 'emulate Lazarus', 'Hidden Cobra', 'DPRK crypto', 'AppleJeus', '3CX supply chain', 'DeFi bridge attack', 'crypto theft'.
LockBit / generic RaaS-affiliate adversary-emulation playbook — broker/edge/RDP initial access, beacon, AD compromise to Domain Admin, defense evasion (Defender-disable via GPO, shadow-copy deletion), bulk exfil, then canary double-extortion encryption (Windows + ESXi). Reusable template for any ransomware affiliate (ALPHV, Akira, Black Basta). Triggers on: 'emulate LockBit', 'ransomware affiliate', 'RaaS', 'double extortion', 'StealBit', 'domain-wide ransomware', 'ESXi locker'.
Sandworm (APT44 / Seashell Blizzard, GRU Unit 74455) adversary-emulation playbook — IT→OT intrusion ending in ICS manipulation or destructive impact, executed with living-off-the-land Windows tooling. SAFETY-CRITICAL: destructive and ICS-write steps are canary/lab-only and gated on explicit OT authorization. Use when emulating Sandworm against an ICS/OT or critical-infrastructure estate. Triggers on: 'emulate Sandworm', 'APT44', 'Seashell Blizzard', 'Voodoo Bear', 'ICS attack', 'OT destructive', 'Industroyer', 'NotPetya'.
Scattered Spider (UNC3944 / Octo Tempest) adversary-emulation playbook — help-desk vishing → MFA takeover → cloud/SaaS/identity privilege expansion → RMM persistence → data-theft extortion. Use when emulating identity-first social-engineering eCrime against a help-desk/IdP estate. Triggers on: 'emulate Scattered Spider', 'UNC3944', 'Octo Tempest', '0ktapus', 'help desk social engineering', 'MFA fatigue', 'SIM swap', 'identity attack'.
Adversary-emulation playbook catalog — per-actor kill chains that turn an APT/eCrime threat profile into Decepticon CONOPS phases + OPPLAN objectives. Routing skill: pick the actor, seed plan/threat-profile.json, then map each kill-chain phase to the operational skill the executing agent runs. Triggers on: 'emulate', 'adversary emulation', 'APT playbook', 'threat actor playbook', 'emulation plan', 'attack flow'.
Threat actor profiling for adversary emulation — APT group research, sophistication tiers, MITRE ATT&CK mapping, initial access vectors, custom archetypes.
Operate BloodHound Community Edition v9.2.2 via Decepticon's bhce_* tools — health check, Cypher passthrough, SharpHound ZIP ingest. Replaces the in-house ingest + ESC* post-process pipeline per ADR-0005.
Active Directory attack lane — BloodHound ingestion, Kerberoasting, ADCS ESC scanning, DCSync, LAPS extraction.
Web application exploitation — the primary category skill for all web-based attacks. This is a routing skill: read this first to identify the attack type, then load the appropriate specialized sub-skill for detailed procedures. Covers 11 technique areas across injection, file access, authentication, and API exploitation.
HTTP Request Smuggling (HRS) — front-end / back-end parser disagreement attacks that desync the proxy stack. Covers CL.TE, TE.CL, TE.TE, CL.0, HTTP/2 downgrade (h2.cl, h2.te), pipelining, and connection-state pinning. Includes a confirm-desync gate, header obfuscation catalog, and minimal raw-socket Python harnesses (no smuggler.py available in sandbox).
Use when the engagement target is an Android (APK / AAB) or iOS (IPA) application. Covers static analysis (jadx, apktool, class-dump), dynamic instrumentation via Frida and Objection, SSL-pinning bypass, root/jailbreak detection bypass, deep-link / URL-scheme abuse, exported-component attacks, IPC redirection, WebView vulnerabilities, and biometric / Face ID / Touch ID bypass.
Web application enumeration hub — directory/file fuzzing, vhost discovery, API enumeration, CMS scanning, WAF detection, auth surface mapping, cookie audit.
Evil-twin rogue AP with KARMA/Mana PNL-probe response, captive-portal credential capture, and post-association MITM for PSK/open networks. Distinct from wpa-enterprise-eap which targets 802.1X.
Top-level index for the Decepticon 802.11 wireless attack suite. Routes the WirelessOperator to the correct leaf skill based on the target AP's crypto column (PSK / SAE / MGT / WPS) and engagement posture. BLE, Zigbee, Z-Wave, LoRaWAN, and sub-GHz live under iot/ by design — link provided below to prevent duplication.
OS Command Injection — exploiting applications that pass user input to OS commands without sanitization. Covers injection operators (;, |, ||, &&, $(), backticks, newline), blind detection (time-based, OOB callback), and bypass techniques (space, keyword, encoding).
Insecure deserialization — RCE via malicious serialized objects in Java (ysoserial), PHP (PHPGGC), .NET (ysoserial.net), and Python (pickle). Covers gadget chain selection, payload generation, and injection into cookies, POST bodies, ViewState, and API endpoints.
Insecure Direct Object References (IDOR) — authorization bypass through predictable object references (sequential IDs, UUIDs, filenames, encoded IDs). Covers horizontal/vertical privilege escalation, ID enumeration, HTTP method tampering, and JWT sub claim manipulation.
Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF) — exploiting server-side URL fetching to access internal services, cloud metadata (AWS/GCP/Azure), internal APIs, and port scanning. Covers IP bypass techniques, DNS rebinding, Gopher protocol smuggling, and redirect-based bypass.