Book Image

Learn Ethical Hacking from Scratch

By : Zaid Sabih
5 (1)
Book Image

Learn Ethical Hacking from Scratch

5 (1)
By: Zaid Sabih

Overview of this book

This book starts with the basics of ethical hacking, how to practice hacking safely and legally, and how to install and interact with Kali Linux and the Linux terminal. You will explore network hacking, where you will see how to test the security of wired and wireless networks. You’ll also learn how to crack the password for any Wi-Fi network (whether it uses WEP, WPA, or WPA2) and spy on the connected devices. Moving on, you will discover how to gain access to remote computer systems using client-side and server-side attacks. You will also get the hang of post-exploitation techniques, including remotely controlling and interacting with the systems that you compromised. Towards the end of the book, you will be able to pick up web application hacking techniques. You'll see how to discover, exploit, and prevent a number of website vulnerabilities, such as XSS and SQL injections. The attacks covered are practical techniques that work against real systems and are purely for educational purposes. At the end of each section, you will learn how to detect, prevent, and secure systems from these attacks.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
22
Discovering Vulnerabilities Automatically Using OWASP ZAP

An introduction to pivoting

In this section (and a few subsequent sections), we will study the concept of pivoting. We will assume that our target is the METASPLOITABLE device. In the following diagram, each one of the big circles is a network, and, as we can see, the Metasploitable device is not visible by the hacker:

The Metasploitable device is hidden, either behind the network, or for some other reason. The hacker is not able to ping or access the IP address of the Metasploitable device. We're assuming that in our example, the Metasploitable device exists in a different network. We can see that the network has four devices. It has the Metasploitable device, an iPhone, another device, and a Windows device (which we hacked, and which is in red); the hacker device exists in the smaller network, and there are only two devices (the hacker, and the Windows machine that we...