Book Image

The Ultimate Kali Linux Book - Third Edition

By : Glen D. Singh
5 (2)
Book Image

The Ultimate Kali Linux Book - Third Edition

5 (2)
By: Glen D. Singh

Overview of this book

Embark on an exciting journey into the world of Kali Linux – the central hub for advanced penetration testing. Honing your pentesting skills and exploiting vulnerabilities or conducting advanced penetration tests on wired and wireless enterprise networks, Kali Linux empowers cybersecurity professionals. In its latest third edition, this book goes further to guide you on how to setup your labs and explains breaches using enterprise networks. This book is designed for newcomers and those curious about penetration testing, this guide is your fast track to learning pentesting with Kali Linux 2024.x. Think of this book as your stepping stone into real-world situations that guides you through lab setups and core penetration testing concepts. As you progress in the book you’ll explore the toolkit of vulnerability assessment tools in Kali Linux, where gathering information takes the spotlight. You'll learn how to find target systems, uncover device security issues, exploit network weaknesses, control operations, and even test web applications. The journey ends with understanding complex web application testing techniques, along with industry best practices. As you finish this captivating exploration of the Kali Linux book, you'll be ready to tackle advanced enterprise network testing – with newfound skills and confidence.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
19
Index

Harvesting employees’ data using Hunter

Around the world, employees of many organizations commonly leak and share too much information about themselves and their organization without realizing how a threat actor or adversary can collect and analyze such information to plan a cyber-attack or improve a threat towards their organizations and themselves. Quite often, you’ll notice that many employees of the leadership team for an organization commonly share their contact details on professional social networking platforms, such as the following types of information:

  • Full name and job title
  • Company’s email address
  • Telephone number
  • Roles and responsibilities
  • Recent projects with technical details
  • Pictures of their employee badges

As a penetration tester, it’s quite simple to create an account that will function as a sock puppet on a site such as LinkedIn, populate some false information on the account, such as...