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Hacker's Challenge : Test Your Incident Response Skills Using 20 Scenarios

Hacker's Challenge : Test Your Incident Response Skills Using 20 Scenarios

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Creator: Mike Schiffman
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Osborne Media
Category: Book

List Price: $29.99
Buy Used: $0.56
You Save: $29.43 (98%)



New (26) Used (31) from $0.56

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 23 reviews
Sales Rank: 636538

Media: Paperback
Pages: 300
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
Dimensions (in): 9 x 7.4 x 0.9

ISBN: 0072193840
Dewey Decimal Number: 005
UPC: 783254038264
EAN: 9780072193848
ASIN: 0072193840

Publication Date: October 18, 2001
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Used Condition - GOOD can be a well cared for Book (including Audio) that is in great condition to a Book that may show some signs of wear. GOOD Books may be marked; have some spine or page creases; exibit signs of aging or an ExLibrary copy. ** Possible marking on cover. 100% Satisfaction guaranteed on all purchases. Delivery is 7-14 days for standard mail. **

Similar Items:

  • Hacker's Challenge 2: Test Your Network Security & Forensic Skills
  • Hacker's Challenge 3 (Hacking Exposed)
  • Hacking Exposed 5th Edition (Hacking Exposed: Network Security Secrets & Solutions)
  • Stealing the Network: How to Own a Continent
  • Hackers Beware: The Ultimate Guide to Network Security (NRG - Voices)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Mike Schiffman has hit upon a great formula for Hacker's Challenge. Rather than try to research, fully understand, and adequately explain attacks that have taken place on other people's networks--the approach taken by too many writers of books about computer security--Schiffman lets network administrators and security experts tell their stories first-hand. This is good. What's better is that Schiffman has edited each of their war stories into two sections: one that presents the observations the sysadmin or security consultant made at the time of the attack, and another (in a separate part of the book) that ties the clues together and explains exactly what was going on. The challenge in the title is for you to figure out what the bad guys were doing--and how best to stop them--before looking at the printed solution. Let's call this book what it is: an Encyclopedia Brown book for people with an interest in network security.

It doesn't really matter, from a value-for-money standpoint, whether your skills are up to the challenge or not. The accounts of intrusions--these are no-kidding, real-life attacks that you can probably learn from, by the way--are written like chapters from a novel (though log file listings, network diagrams, and performance graphs appear alongside the narrative text). Recall every time you've seen a movie or read a book with computer scenes so technically inaccurate they made you wish for a writer with a clue. Schiffman and Hacker's Challenge is what you wished for. --David Wall

Topics covered: The sorts of attacks that black-hat hackers (everyone from script kiddies to accomplished baddies) launch against Internet-linked computers and networks. Everything is presented from the perspective of the defenders--i.e., the network administrators--who have to look at log files and process activity to figure out what's going on.

Product Description
"Hacker's Challenge" will consist of 20-25 hacking scenarios followed by the solution for each. The challenges/chapters are organized by increasing levels of complexity, and covers many hot topics, including Web content, VPNs, Denial of Service, wireless issues, e-commerce, email attacks and more. It includes input from top names in the industry - in addition to Mike Schiffman, consultants from the top security firms, such as Guardent, Foundstone, @Stake, SecurityFocus.com, In-Q-Tel, Arbor Networks, LoudCloud and more contribute their expertise. It is intended for a broad audience - "Hacker's Challenge" is for anyone who wants to solve the latest hacking challenges. It is a great companion to "Hacking Exposed" - an entire book of hands-on scenarios that compliment the "Hacking Exposed" text.


Customer Reviews:   Read 18 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Hacker's Challenge   January 31, 2008
Michael Madigan (California)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Complicated. Misleading. Not at all what I expected! Over-priced and very rudimentary. Not worth the hard earned dollars that I shelled out for the book.


5 out of 5 stars Challenging!   August 16, 2007
Romina Wilcox (Silicon Valley Author)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Hacker's Challenge is a must have for every computer forensics. The scenarious given are indeed technically challenging and I like the fact that the complexity of attack, prevention, and mitigation are already specified. It is also very helpful as it make references to external resources that contain more info about a particular specified vulnerabilities. The log files, network maps, etch are very helpful in making a forensic analysis. I look forward to getting the new version. Cold Eyes


4 out of 5 stars Good, but scenarios getting out of date   February 23, 2006
Ajay Patel (Philadelphia, PA United States)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The Challenge/Solution style of these books are great for security beginners as well as seasoned professionals. If you read carefully you can pick up many hints/tools which you can use in real life security scenarios.

My only -ve comment about this book is its getting out of date now. Many of the incidents described are not relevant now, as security practices at most firms would thrawt these incidents. Having said that, the scenarios are still good for security beginners. For advanced readers I would suggest the Second edition or the soon to be released third edition.



1 out of 5 stars uhm..   October 8, 2003
James Rothschadl (Arlington, VA United States)
10 out of 15 found this review helpful

this book sucks. plain and simple. i have some respect for the author, i've used his libnet and he's a funny guy.. but this book is garbage. the last good thing mike schiffman wrote was libnet, and after that he figured why not just take it easy and write dumb books like this for the rest of his life, be a manager @stake and get paid way more than the researchers who are doing the actual work. he goes into stupid crap like backdoors in inetd.conf, how outdated can you get.. what is this? incident response to that crappy phrack article he wrote years and years ago about simple unix backdoors? hah. the real challenge here is for a real hacker to read the whole book and maintain his sanity.


5 out of 5 stars GOOD Book   July 23, 2003
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I have read many books about network security, but none had put it so easy to actually test the knowledge gain from my reading.
I would recommend this book to any tech guy entrusted with the security of any network of any site. This is the complement book for hacker exposed


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