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The Ultimate Kali Linux Book - Second Edition

You're reading from  The Ultimate Kali Linux Book - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Feb 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801818933
Pages 742 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Glen D. Singh Glen D. Singh
Profile icon Glen D. Singh

Table of Contents (23) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started with Penetration Testing
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Ethical Hacking 3. Chapter 2: Building a Penetration Testing Lab 4. Chapter 3: Setting Up for Advanced Hacking Techniques 5. Section 2: Reconnaissance and Network Penetration Testing
6. Chapter 4: Reconnaissance and Footprinting 7. Chapter 5: Exploring Active Information Gathering 8. Chapter 6: Performing Vulnerability Assessments 9. Chapter 7: Understanding Network Penetration Testing 10. Chapter 8: Performing Network Penetration Testing 11. Section 3: Red Teaming Techniques
12. Chapter 9: Advanced Network Penetration Testing — Post Exploitation 13. Chapter 10: Working with Active Directory Attacks 14. Chapter 11: Advanced Active Directory Attacks 15. Chapter 12: Delving into Command and Control Tactics 16. Chapter 13: Advanced Wireless Penetration Testing 17. Section 4: Social Engineering and Web Application Attacks
18. Chapter 14: Performing Client-Side Attacks – Social Engineering 19. Chapter 15: Understanding Website Application Security 20. Chapter 16: Advanced Website Penetration Testing 21. Chapter 17: Best Practices for the Real World 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Types of social engineering

While social engineering focuses on psychologically hacking the human mind, there are various types of social engineering attacks, such as traditional human-based, computer-based, and even mobile-based attacks. During this section, you will discover the fundamentals and characteristics of each type of social engineering attack.

Human-based

In human-based social engineering, the threat actor or penetration tester usually pretends to be someone with authority, such as a person who is important within the organization. This means the threat actor can attempt to impersonate a director or senior member of staff and request a password change on the victim's user account. An easy form of impersonation that usually gets a user to trust you quickly is posing as technical support. Imagine calling an employee while you're pretending to be an IT person from the organization's helpdesk team and requesting the user to provide their user account details...

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