Sec542 Web App Penetration Testing And Ethical Hacking Pdf Download Free Softwa

Sec542 Web App Penetration Testing And Ethical Hacking Pdf Download Free Softwa Rating: 7,5/10 9275 reviews

One roof cyber cafe pro mcs server manual free. Pen Test Training Listen to Internet Storm Center Daily Podcast Attend an InfoSec Conference Participate in SANS NetWars BONUS TURN Opponent Loses Turn BONUS TURN Go Forward 3 Spaces Go Forward 2 Spaces Advance to Next Phase All Opponents Lose a Turn Advance to Next Phase Download a PDF version of the Pivots & Payloads poster, additional game.

Contents • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Overall: I had the opportunity to take during the SANS Cyber Defense Initiative (CDI) event in Washington D.C. This December with one of the course authors. Eric absolutely killed it, and was one of the reasons I signed up for this particular course. I had heard he was a great speaker and had lots of relevant pentester tales from his own company doing just that.

I was pleasantly surprised to see that Eric’s stories really made each day for me. Eric’s pentest stories brought the concepts he was lecturing to life and really showcased their relevancy for me. Plus, I enjoy learning from a firehouse and Eric being from Boston area was able to keep up with that pace! The overall 6-day course left a great impression on me, and would recommend it for anyone new to Web App pentesting.

The CDI event of course added additional benefits such as night talks and access to sponsors for the swag run. My Prior Experience: I’ve had a lot of exposure to the different vulnerabilities discussed, techniques, methods, and tools this course reviewed from previous self-study, Masters courses, reading InfoSec books, watching YouTube videos from tech conferences, and taking free online courses. Want to self-study or prepare for this course beforehand? Be sure to check out cybrary.it • • • • • Day 1: The first day was all about reconnaissance using active and passive methods for research and information gathering of the target. Some useful passive methods were discussed, however this is an entire course in itself using Open Source Intelligence or OSINT.

Additional active methods were discussed as well such as DNS scans using a variety of different tools and methods. Some discussions were held on SSL/TLS ciphers and how to test for weak encryption. Finally, we ended the day with the famous including how to identify it and exploit it. Overall, this was the most bland day that I had trouble diverting 100% of my attention to as I already knew most of it.

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Day 2: We really started getting into the fun stuff on the second day with a lot more hands on labs. Lots of command line tricks were discussed including netcat, nmap scanning tips, curl, grep, and bash scripting to aide in web application configuration testing. There was also heavy discussion on actively scanning hosts using Burp and ZAP spidering tools. One of my favorite labs was directory brute forcing, ages ago I used the now defunct DirBuster tool.

Neighbours from hell xbox. Come to find out that the ZAP tool now includes that functionality called ZAP Force Browse. We also discussed alternative methods to recreate the same functionality with different wordlists, generators, and tools. One really useful wordlist generator is the ruby based tool. Cewl crawls a website for text in HTML, Javascript, etc following links to a specified depth and generates unique words discovered.

This is especially useful when trying to identify a possible password an employee may have used unique to that organization or company. We ended the day with a heavy discussion on the We discussed ways to test for the critical vulnerability and how to exploit it running simple bash commands to a backdoor via meterpreter. Day 3: The third day was by far my favorite, as it was incredibly fast paced and heavily lab-centered. We started off getting into information leakage, username harvesting, and the fun stuff like local and remote file inclusion, command injection, and directory traversal. There were lots of lectures around identifying vulnerable forms for command injection, we even had a lab to to take advantage of this and initiate a reverse backdoor to our netcat listener.