Book Image

CompTIA Security+ Practice Tests SY0-501

By : Ian Neil
Book Image

CompTIA Security+ Practice Tests SY0-501

By: Ian Neil

Overview of this book

CompTIA Security+ is a core security certification that will validate your baseline skills for a career in cybersecurity. Passing this exam will not only help you identify security incidents but will also equip you to resolve them efficiently. This book builds on the popular CompTIA Security+ Certification Guide, which mirrors the SY0-501 exam pattern. This practice test-based guide covers all six domains of the Security+ SY0-501 exam: threats, attacks, and vulnerabilities; technologies and tools; architecture and design; identity and access management; cryptography and PKI; and risk management. You’ll take six mock tests designed as per the official Security+ certification exam pattern, each covering significant aspects from an examination point of view. For each domain, the book provides a dedicated cheat sheet that includes important concepts covered in the test. You can even time your tests to simulate the actual exam. These tests will help you identify gaps in your knowledge and discover answers to tricky exam questions. By the end of this book, you’ll have developed and enhanced the skills necessary to pass the official CompTIA Security+ exam.
Table of Contents (9 chapters)
Threats, Attacks, and Vulnerabilities Practice Tests

One of the most crucial areas that a security professional needs to have knowledge about is the type of attacks that there are and the ways that these attacks can be mitigated so that your company is less vulnerable to attacks. The CompTIA exam breaks this examination topic into different areas.

The first area we look at is the types of malware that exist, such as basic viruses, worms, trojans, ransomware, adware, spyware, rootkits, keyloggers, logic bombs, and backdoor.

Next, we will compare and contrast the different types of attacks. This area is immense. We will also look at the different types of social engineering attacks, where the individual is seen as the weak link that the attacker will try to exploit. These attacks range from phishing, spear phishing, whaling, vishing, tailgating, impersonating, dumpster diving, shoulder...