Hacking: A Concise Guide To Ethical Hacking - Everything You Need To Know! (Penetration Testing) (Unabridged) Hacking: A Concise Guide To Ethical Hacking - Everything You Need To Know! (Penetration Testing) (Unabridged)

Hacking: A Concise Guide To Ethical Hacking - Everything You Need To Know! (Penetration Testing) (Unabridged‪)‬

    • 3.0 • 1 Rating
    • $5.99

    • $5.99

Publisher Description

Everything you need to know about ethical hacking.

Learn all the major hacking techniques today and how they work. By the time, you finish this book you will have strong knowledge of what a professional ethical hacker goes through. You will also be able to put these practices into action. There are five phases to penetration testing. These are important steps for any hacker to perform in order to successfully gain and maintain access. Properly performing the steps outlined in Hacking: A Concise Guide To Ethical Hacking, Everything You Need To Know can make the difference between a successful penetration or an unsuccessful one. Passive and active footprinting are discussed in detail and you will soon have some excellent footprinting tools available to you to use to complete the footprint.

Malware, Trojans, Viruses and worms are often specifically designed to gain access or damage systems without the knowledge of the victim. You will also learn about social engineering techniques, why they are so effective and get the social engineering toolkit to perform the job. Once the homework for the attack is complete the next step covered is the implementation of system hacking. Gain access with various password attacks, exploit weaknesses, get higher privileges and discover the tools that are used to hide a successful intrusion. 

GENRE
Self-Development
NARRATOR
ST
Sean Tivenan
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
01:52
hr min
RELEASED
2017
November 3
PUBLISHER
Gary Mitnick
PRESENTED BY
Audible.com
SIZE
92.3
MB

Customer Reviews

Gregory F. Miller ,

Typical

Covers the basics but it repeatedly mentions URLs which are all wrong. Like
http:\\domain.wat
Supposed to be // which will confuse everybody.
Luckily the browser will auto-correct it. Still derpy though.