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Learn Ethical Hacking from Scratch

You're reading from   Learn Ethical Hacking from Scratch Your stepping stone to penetration testing

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788622059
Length 564 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Zaid Sabih Zaid Sabih
Author Profile Icon Zaid Sabih
Zaid Sabih
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Setting Up a Lab 3. Linux Basics 4. Network Penetration Testing 5. Pre-Connection Attacks 6. Network Penetration Testing - Gaining Access 7. Post-Connection Attacks 8. Man-in-the-Middle Attacks 9. Network Penetration Testing, Detection, and Security 10. Gaining Access to Computer Devices 11. Scanning Vulnerabilities Using Tools 12. Client-Side Attacks 13. Client-Side Attacks - Social Engineering 14. Attack and Detect Trojans with BeEF 15. Attacks Outside the Local Network 16. Post Exploitation 17. Website Penetration Testing 18. Website Pentesting - Information Gathering 19. File Upload, Code Execution, and File Inclusion Vulnerabilities 20. SQL Injection Vulnerabilities 21. Cross-Site Scripting Vulnerabilities 22. Discovering Vulnerabilities Automatically Using OWASP ZAP 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Detecting ARP poisoning

Let's take a look at how to detect ARP poisoning attacks. First of all, we need to gain an understanding of the ARP table. On our Windows device, which is the device that we always attack, we are going to run the arp -a command to list all the entries in the ARP table. Each computer has an ARP table, and that table associates IP addresses with MAC addresses. We have the IP address of a router, which is 10.0.2.1 and is associated with the MAC address 52-54-00-12-35-00, as shown in the following screenshot:

ARP poisoning works via trusted requests; as you can see in the previous screenshot, when a request is trusted, responses are accepted by the client even if a request isn't actually sent. The hacker sends a response to the client telling them that they are the router, which is automatically trusted and then accepted. Hacker will now send another...

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