Overview
Test your skills and learn to hack applications with Web Application Hacking and Security. Whether you are a beginner or an experienced ethical hacker, the Web Application Hacking and Security course offers something for all skill levels. You will hack through a variety of challenges from SQL Injection, to Security Misconfigurations, to Cross-Site-Scripting, and more.
Who Should Attend
- Penetration Tester
- Ethical Hacker
- Web Application Penetration Tester
- Security Engineer/Auditor
- Red Team Engineer
- Information Security Engineer
- Risk/Vulnerability Analyst
- Vulnerability Manager
- Incident Responder
Course Objectives
Web Application Hacking and Security has challenges derived from the iLab environments of EC Council – from Certified Ethical Hacker (C|EH) to the Certified Penetration Testing Professional (C|PENT); from Certified Application Security Engineer (C|ASE) .Net to Java. But Web Application Hacking and Security goes beyond this to more difficult scenarios as you advance through each problem. Web Application Hacking and Security is like Capture-The-Flag (CTF) competitions meant to test your hacking skills. But you can keep on trying until you achieve the goal. Test your skills and work alone to solve complex problems or follow the instructor as he does walkthroughs to help you learn Web Application Hacking and Security.
Product Description
You will learn about application vulnerabilities and web application hacking. Even though this will prove useful for other CTF contests, and in cracking VVMs, it will be even more useful to your career as you learn to defend your applications and progress to Web Application Hacking and Security.
- Advanced Web Application Penetration Testing
- Advanced SQL Injection (SQLi)
- Reflected, Stored and DOM-based Cross Site
- Scripting (XSS)
- Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF) – GET and
- POST Methods
- Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF)
- Security Misconfigurations
- Directory Browsing/Bruteforcing
- CMS Vulnerability Scanning
- Network Scanning
- Auth Bypass
- Web App Enumeration
- Dictionary Attack
- Insecure Direct Object Reference Prevention
- (IDOR)
- Broken Access Control
- Local File Inclusion (LFI)
- Remote File Inclusion (RFI)
- Arbitrary File Download
- Arbitrary File Upload
- Using Components with Known Vulnerabilities
- Command Injection
- Remote Code Execution
- File Tampering
- Privilege Escalation
- Log Poisoning
- Weak SSL Ciphers
- Cookie Modification
- Source Code Analysis
- HTTP Header modification
- Session Fixation
- Clickjacking