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Cybersecurity Attacks – Red Team Strategies

You're reading from   Cybersecurity Attacks – Red Team Strategies A practical guide to building a penetration testing program having homefield advantage

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838828868
Length 524 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Johann Rehberger Johann Rehberger
Author Profile Icon Johann Rehberger
Johann Rehberger
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Embracing the Red
2. Chapter 1: Establishing an Offensive Security Program FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Managing an Offensive Security Team 4. Chapter 3: Measuring an Offensive Security Program 5. Chapter 4: Progressive Red Teaming Operations 6. Section 2: Tactics and Techniques
7. Chapter 5: Situational Awareness – Mapping Out the Homefield Using Graph Databases 8. Chapter 6: Building a Comprehensive Knowledge Graph 9. Chapter 7: Hunting for Credentials 10. Chapter 8: Advanced Credential Hunting 11. Chapter 9: Powerful Automation 12. Chapter 10: Protecting the Pen Tester 13. Chapter 11: Traps, Deceptions, and Honeypots 14. Chapter 12: Blue Team Tactics for the Red Team 15. Assessments 16. Another Book You May Enjoy

Chapter 2

  1. Homefield advantage is the benefit that the internal security team has compared to an adversary. Realizing and successfully leveraging that advantage allows us to be one step ahead of an adversary. Internal red and blue teams can practice on the homefield to improve their capabilities of quickly and effectively detecting, responding to, and remediating an attack. Part of a homefield advantage strategy includes close collaboration between all stakeholders to ensure findings are shared and remediated quickly, as well as shared with others in the organization via training to help raise security awareness and understanding of attacks across the board.
  2. STRIDE is a threat classification framework developed by Microsoft. It models threats via the following categories: Spoofing, Tampering, Repudiation, Information Disclosure, Denial of Service, and Elevation of Privilege.
  3. The normalization of deviance highlights the slow but steady process within an 
organization...
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