Book Image

Advanced Penetration Testing for Highly-Secured Environments, Second Edition - Second Edition

By : Lee Allen, Kevin Cardwell
Book Image

Advanced Penetration Testing for Highly-Secured Environments, Second Edition - Second Edition

By: Lee Allen, Kevin Cardwell

Overview of this book

The defences continue to improve and become more and more common, but this book will provide you with a number or proven techniques to defeat the latest defences on the networks. The methods and techniques contained will provide you with a powerful arsenal of best practices to increase your penetration testing successes. The processes and methodology will provide you techniques that will enable you to be successful, and the step by step instructions of information gathering and intelligence will allow you to gather the required information on the targets you are testing. The exploitation and post-exploitation sections will supply you with the tools you would need to go as far as the scope of work will allow you. The challenges at the end of each chapter are designed to challenge you and provide real-world situations that will hone and perfect your penetration testing skills. You will start with a review of several well respected penetration testing methodologies, and following this you will learn a step-by-step methodology of professional security testing, including stealth, methods of evasion, and obfuscation to perform your tests and not be detected! The final challenge will allow you to create your own complex layered architecture with defences and protections in place, and provide the ultimate testing range for you to practice the methods shown throughout the book. The challenge is as close to an actual penetration test assignment as you can get!
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Advanced Penetration Testing for Highly-Secured Environments Second Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Chapter 8. Exploitation Concepts

Client-side attacks characteristically require user interaction. A careless visit to a website can result in devastation. Generally speaking, a client-side attack will be focused on the "client" machine used by individuals at home or in the office. In a properly secured environment, these hosts will be protected using a combination of security mechanisms and practices, such as white listing, network segmentation, host-based firewalls, file integrity monitors, system configuration hardening, and antivirus.

With proper training, users are well aware that clicking on unknown links, opening e-mail attachments, or even plugging in an untrusted device, may have the potential to be harmful. Unfortunately, convenience often supersedes common sense, and as such, users will continue to repeat old mistakes. After all, shouldn't all of these protection mechanisms installed by the administrators protect the user from everything?

In large environments, desktops, workstations...