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Global Information Assurance Certification

GIAC certs are concerned with real applications and principles, rather than vendor products and implementations.
-Rob VandenBrink

NOTE: Mentor sessions run for 10 weeks, one evening a week for two hours unless otherwise noted below.
Security 560: Network Penetration Testing and Ethical Hacking

Austin, TX
Monday, July 13, 2009 - Monday, August 10, 2009

Class meets Monday and Wednesday evenings

CLOSED

Course Fee: $2,995.00

$499.00 Additional For Proctored Certification †
$399.00 Additional For OnDemand

* Payment must be RECEIVED by the deadline to receive the posted rate.

Mentor: Charles Poff
Date:  Monday, July 13, 2009
Meeting Time:  6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Where:

Rattan Creek Community Center
7617 Elkhorn Mountain Trail
Austin, TX
Phone: 512.257.1255

Class well be held from 6:00PM - 8:00PM on Monday and Wednesday evenings.

Mentor Bio:
 Charles Poff: Charles is a Principal Security Consultant with Symantec. He has over 12 years experience in information technology with a diverse and comprehensive background in information security. Charles specializes in penetration testing, attack vectors, vulnerability assessments/research, and various IT compliance programs. He has extensive knowledge in intrusion detection/prevention systems, and is a former senior security consultant at Internet Security Systems (ISS). He has managed numerous information risk assessments for both public and private sector clients. Charles has a master’s degree in computer information systems (CIS) and a bachelor’s degree in computer systems management (CSM). In addition to being a security consultant, Charles also teaches security classes at St. Edwards University in Austin, Texas. He holds a number of professional certifications and currently lives in the Austin area. Charles is excited to become a SANS Mentor and enjoys teaching and promoting new ideas focusing on security.

Find Security Flaws Before the Bad Guys Do

Security vulnerabilities, such as weak configurations, unpatched systems, and botched architectures, continue to plague organizations. Enterprises need people who can find these flaws in a professional manner to help eradicate them from our infrastructures. Lots of people claim to have penetration testing, ethical hacking, and security assessment skills, but precious few can apply these skills in a methodical regimen of professional testing to help make an organization more secure. This class covers the ingredients for successful network penetration testing to help attendees improve their enterprise's security stance.

We address detailed pre-test planning, including setting up an effective penetration testing infrastructure and establishing ground rules with the target organization to avoid surprises and misunderstanding. Then, we discuss a time-tested methodology for penetration and ethical hacking across the network, evaluating the security of network services and the operating systems behind them.

Attendees will learn how to perform detailed reconnaissance, learning about a target's infrastructure by mining blogs, search engines, and social networking sites. We'll then turn our attention to scanning, experimenting with numerous tools in hands-on exercises. Our exploitation phase will include the use of exploitation frameworks, stand-alone exploits, and other valuable tactics, all with hands-on exercises in our lab environment. The class also discusses how to prepare a final report, tailored to maximize the value of the test from both a management and technical perspective. The final portion of the class includes a comprehensive hands-on exercise, conducting a penetration test against a hypothetical target organization, following all of the steps.

The course also describes the limitations of penetration testing techniques and other practices that can be used to augment penetration testing to find vulnerabilities in architecture, policies, and processes. We also address how penetration testing should be integrated as a piece of a comprehensive enterprise information security program.

Differentiators

This SANS course differs from other penetration testing and ethical hacking courses in several important ways:

  • We get deep into the tools arsenal with numerous hands-on exercises that show subtle, less-well-known, and undocumented features that are incredibly useful for professional penetration testers and ethical hackers.
  • The course discusses how the tools interrelate with each other in an overall testing process. Rather than just throwing up a bunch of tools and playing with them, we analyze how to leverage information from one tool to get the most bang out of the next tool.
  • We focus on the workflow of professional penetration testers and ethical hackers, proceeding step-by-step discussing the most effective means for conducting projects.
  • The sessions address common pitfalls that arise in penetration tests and ethical hacking projects, providing real-world strategies and tactics for avoiding these problems to maximize the quality of test results.
  • We cover several timesaving tactics based on years of in-the-trenches experience from real penetration testers and ethical hackers, actions that might take hours or days unless you know the little secrets we'll cover that will let you surmount a problem in minutes.
  • The course stresses the mind-set of successful penetration testers and ethical hackers, which involves balancing the often contravening forces of creative "outside-the-box" thinking, methodical trouble-shooting, carefully weighing risks, following a time-tested process, painstakingly documenting results, and creating a high quality final report that achieves management and technical buy-in.
  • We also analyze how penetration testing and ethical hacking should fit into a comprehensive enterprise information security program.