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C|EH

Ethical Hacking: Certified Ethical Hacker [DoD 8570 approved]

Ask about our free portable wirelesss hacking system offered in some of our Ethical hacking courses.

The goal of this course is to help those that deal with vulnerability assessments and penetration tests work within a repeatable framework and methodology to validate risks within an organization. To truly understand the risks, you must also understand the treats including the exploits along with the computer criminals and cyber terrorists. This class helps you through this process with internationally recognized Instructors and complete hands on, lab based sessions. Controlled capture the flag events will help solidify the information covered and skills learned

The CEH exam is given at the end of the week and currently has a 96% student pass rate.

If you want to stop hackers from invading your network, first you've got to invade their minds.

Hacking is a Problem

Computers around the world are systematically being victimized by rampant hacking. This hacking is not only widespread, but is being executed so flawlessly that the attackers compromise a system, steal everything of value and completely erase their tracks within 20 minutes.

The goal of the ethical hacker is to help the organization take preemptive measures against malicious attacks by attacking the system himself; all the while staying within legal limits. This philosophy stems from the proven practice of trying to catch a thief, by thinking like a thief. As technology advances and organization depend on technology increasingly, information assets have evolved into critical components of survival.

Thinking Outside the Box

If hacking involves creativity and thinking 'out-of-the-box', then vulnerability testing and security audits will not ensure the security proofing of an organization. To ensure that organizations have adequately protected their information assets, they must adopt the approach of 'defense in depth'. In other words, they must penetrate their networks and assess the security posture for vulnerabilities and exposure.

The definition of an Ethical Hacker is very similar to a Penetration Tester. The Ethical Hacker is an individual who is usually employed with the organization and who can be trusted to undertake an attempt to penetrate networks and/or computer systems using the same methods as a Hacker. Hacking is a felony in the United States and most other countries. When it is done by request and under a contract between an Ethical Hacker and an organization, it is legal. The most important point is that an Ethical Hacker has authorization to probe the target.

The CEH Program

The CEH Program certifies individuals in the specific network security discipline of Ethical Hacking from a vendor-neutral perspective. The Certified Ethical Hacker certification will fortify the application knowledge of security officers, auditors, security professionals, site administrators, and anyone who is concerned about the integrity of the network infrastructure. A Certified Ethical Hacker is a skilled professional who understands and knows how to look for the weaknesses and vulnerabilities in target systems and uses the same knowledge and tools as a malicious hacker.

Run hacking attacks in our classroom labs, be a hacker for a week:
Some of the hacking concepts you will learn to master during this hands on hacking course...

  • 8570.1m compliance
  • Penetration testing methodologies
  • Open source Intelligence gathering
  • Social Engineering
  • Physical cyber security evasion
  • Stealthy network reconnaissance
  • Passive traffic identification
  • Wireless Hacking WEP/WPA 2
  • Deep packet inspection
  • Remote root vulnerability exploitation
  • Privilege escalation
  • Remote access through Trojans & Rootkits
  • Running shellcode in RAM vs. on disk
  • Breaking IP-based ACLs via spoofing
  • Attacking network infrastructure devices
  • Evidence removal and anti-forensics
  • Google hacking
  • Website exploitation with SQL injection
  • Cross Site Scripting “Spear Phishing”
  • Hacking by brute forcing remotely
  • Hiding exploit payloads in graphics
  • Hacking Into Cisco routers
  • Lab environment with real vulnerabilities
  • CEH review
  • Showing value to management
  • Defensive techniques
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