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CEH v10 Certified Ethical Hacker Study Guide

CEH v10 Certified Ethical Hacker Study Guide

By : Ric Messier
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CEH v10 Certified Ethical Hacker Study Guide

CEH v10 Certified Ethical Hacker Study Guide

By: Ric Messier

Overview of this book

As protecting information becomes a rapidly growing concern for today’s businesses, certifications in IT security have become highly desirable, even as the number of certifications has grown. Now you can set yourself apart with the Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH v10) certification. The CEH v10 Certified Ethical Hacker Study Guide offers a comprehensive overview of the CEH certification requirements using concise and easy-to-follow instructions. Chapters are organized by exam objective, with a handy section that maps each objective to its corresponding chapter, so you can keep a track of your progress. The text provides thorough coverage of all topics, along with challenging chapter review questions and Exam Essentials, a key feature that identifies critical study areas. Subjects include intrusion detection, DDoS attacks, buffer overflows, virus creation, and more. This study guide goes beyond test prep, providing practical hands-on exercises to reinforce vital skills and real-world scenarios that put what you’ve learned into the context of actual job roles. By the end of the book, you’ll have all the information and knowledge you need to pass this test with flying colors
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
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1
Cover
2
About the Author
3
Introduction
4
Assessment Test
5
Answers to Assessment Test
20
Index
21
Comprehensive Online Learning Environment
22
End User License Agreement

Chapter 7: System Hacking

  1. D. There are three date and time stamps commonly used in file metadata. When the file is created, that moment is stored. When a file is accessed by a user, that moment is stored. When a file is modified, that moment is stored. Accessed is not the same as modified since accessing a file could be read-only. You could open a file expecting to modify it, but not end up doing the modification. The access time still changes. While moves, adds, and changes may sometimes be referred to as MAC, like modified, accessed, and created, those are not tasks associated with file times.
  2. A. Account migration, privilege migration, and account escalation are vague and don’t have clearly defined definitions, even if they may exist. Privilege escalation, on the other hand, is used to gain elevated privileges when you only have the permissions of a normal user.
  3. B. Incremental mode in John will run an attack in which it will try every possible password within specified parameters...
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CEH v10 Certified Ethical Hacker Study Guide
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