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Mastering Kali Linux for Advanced Penetration Testing

You're reading from   Mastering Kali Linux for Advanced Penetration Testing Secure your network with Kali Linux 2019.1 – the ultimate white hat hackers' toolkit

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789340563
Length 548 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Robert Beggs Robert Beggs
Author Profile Icon Robert Beggs
Robert Beggs
Vijay Kumar Velu Vijay Kumar Velu
Author Profile Icon Vijay Kumar Velu
Vijay Kumar Velu
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Goal-Based Penetration Testing FREE CHAPTER 2. Open Source Intelligence and Passive Reconnaissance 3. Active Reconnaissance of External and Internal Networks 4. Vulnerability Assessment 5. Advanced Social Engineering and Physical Security 6. Wireless Attacks 7. Exploiting Web-Based Applications 8. Client-Side Exploitation 9. Bypassing Security Controls 10. Exploitation 11. Action on the Objective and Lateral Movement 12. Privilege Escalation 13. Command and Control 14. Embedded Devices and RFID Hacking 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Credential harvesting and escalation attacks


Credential harvesting is the process of identifying usernames, passwords, and hashes that can be utilized to achieve the objective set by the organization for a penetration testing/red team exercise. In this section, we will walk through three different types of credential harvesting mechanism that are typically used by attackers in Kali Linux.

Password sniffers

Password sniffers are a set of tools/scripts that typically perform man-in-the-middle attacks by discovery, spoofing, sniffing the traffic, and by proxying. From our previous experience, we noted that most organizations do not utilize SSL internally; Wireshark revealed multiple usernames and passwords.

In this section, we will explore bettercap to capture SSL traffic on the network so that we can capture the credentials of network users. bettercap is similar to the previous-generation ettercap command, with the additional capability to perform network-level spoofing and sniffing. It can be...

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