Watch Linkedin Ethical Hacking: Evading Ids, Firewalls, And Honeypots -
IDS and IPS devices have limited memory and processing power. They must process packets in real-time. By slowing down the delivery of packets, an attacker can exploit the "timeout" threshold of the security device. If an attacker sends one byte of a packet every few minutes, the IDS may time out before reassembling the full stream, discarding the session data before the attack is fully formed. Meanwhile, the target server, configured with a longer timeout window, accepts the entire payload.
Breaking malicious data into smaller pieces so the IDS cannot recognize the full "signature" of an attack. IDS and IPS devices have limited memory and processing power
Encrypting or encoding payloads to make them unreadable to standard scanners. If an attacker sends one byte of a
#EthicalHacking #RedTeam #CyberSecurity #PenetrationTesting #BlueTeam #InfoSec #EvasionTechniques Encrypting or encoding payloads to make them unreadable
Honeypots are "decoy" systems designed to lure attackers away from real assets. A skilled ethical hacker must identify these traps before they trigger an alert. The course teaches: Ethical Hacking: Evading IDS, Firewalls, and Honeypots
In the realm of cybersecurity, the relationship between attacker and defender is a perpetual game of cat and mouse. For Ethical Hackers and Penetration Testers, the goal is not merely to breach a system, but to simulate a realistic attack scenario to identify weaknesses. While modern defenses—Intrusion Detection Systems (IDS), firewalls, and honeypots—have become incredibly sophisticated, they are not infallible.
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