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Applied Network Security

You're reading from  Applied Network Security

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781786466273
Pages 350 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (3):
Arthur Salmon Arthur Salmon
Profile icon Arthur Salmon
Michael McLafferty Michael McLafferty
Profile icon Michael McLafferty
Warun Levesque Warun Levesque
Profile icon Warun Levesque
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters close

Preface 1. Introduction to Network Security 2. Sniffing the Network 3. How to Crack Wi-Fi Passwords 4. Creating a RAT Using Msfvenom 5. Veil Framework 6. Social Engineering Toolkit and Browser Exploitation 7. Advanced Network Attacks 8. Passing and Cracking the Hash 9. SQL Injection 10. Scapy 11. Web Application Exploits 12. Evil Twins and Spoofing 13. Injectable Devices 14. The Internet of Things 15. Detection Systems 16. Advance Wireless Security Lab Using the Wi-Fi Pineapple Nano/Tetra 17. Offensive Security and Threat Hunting

Gathering version info

When Nmap runs a port scan, it retrieves the port info (open/closed/filtered) and then gives us the default service that is running on that port. As one can run any service on any port, that may not be adequate information. If our attack requires a particular service on a particular port, gathering the default information may not be enough. We need to know what service is actually running on that port, not the default service. For instance, knowing that port 80 is open and running HTTP is good to know, but if our attack is specific to Apache, and the target has Microsoft's IIS running on that port, it won't work. We often need the service on the port.

Nmap has a feature that interrogates the service running on each port scanned. It can be used with the -sV switch. Type nmap -sV 192.168.10.70:

Note that, in the output we received, the server is running an older version of IIS on...

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