Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH v10 )
(CEH-v10) / ISBN : 978-1-64459-115-4
About This Course
Start your prep for the EC-Council Certified Ethical Hacker exam with the CEH v10 course and lab. Lab simulates real-world, hardware, software, and command-line interface environments and can be mapped to any textbook, course, or training. The Certified Ethical Hacker certification course and lab cover CEH v10 exam objectives thoroughly and teach the principles of ethical hacking. Lessons and TestPrep will further prepare candidates for this certification exam with their interactive item types.
Skills You’ll Get
The Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH) certification validates the application knowledge of auditors, security officers, and site administrators to establish and govern the minimum standards of credentialing professional information security specialists in ethical hacking measures. Passing the CEH exam certifies that individuals have the specific network security discipline of ethical hacking from a vendor-neutral perspective.
Interactive Lessons
15+ Interactive Lessons | 250+ Quizzes | 70+ Flashcards | 140+ Glossary of terms
Gamified TestPrep
100+ Pre Assessment Questions | 2+ Full Length Tests | 100+ Post Assessment Questions | 200+ Practice Test Questions
Hands-On Labs
38+ LiveLab | 38+ Video tutorials | 16+ Minutes
Introduction
- What Is a CEH?
- About EC-Council
- Using This Course
- Objective Map
- Let’s Get Started!
Ethical Hacking
- Overview of Ethics
- Overview of Ethical Hacking
- Methodology of Ethical Hacking
- Summary
Networking Foundations
- Communications Models
- Topologies
- Physical Networking
- IP
- TCP
- UDP
- Internet Control Message Protocol
- Network Architectures
- Cloud Computing
- Summary
Security Foundations
- The Triad
- Risk
- Policies, Standards, and Procedures
- Security Technology
- Being Prepared
- Summary
Footprinting and Reconnaissance
- Open-Source Intelligence
- Domain Name System
- Passive Reconnaissance
- Website Intelligence
- Technology Intelligence
- Summary
Scanning Networks
- Ping Sweeps
- Port Scanning
- Vulnerability Scanning
- Packet Crafting and Manipulation
- Evasion Techniques
- Summary
Enumeration
- Service Enumeration
- Remote Procedure Calls
- Server Message Block
- Simple Network Management Protocol
- Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
- Web-Based Enumeration
- Summary
System Hacking
- Searching for Exploits
- System Compromise
- Gathering Passwords
- Password Cracking
- Client-Side Vulnerabilities
- Post Exploitation
- Summary
Malware
- Malware Types
- Malware Analysis
- Creating Malware
- Malware Infrastructure
- Antivirus Solutions
- Summary
Sniffing
- Packet Capture
- Packet Analysis
- Spoofing Attacks
- Summary
Social Engineering
- Social Engineering
- Physical Social Engineering
- Phishing Attacks
- Website Attacks
- Wireless Social Engineering
- Automating Social Engineering
- Summary
Wireless Security
- Wi-Fi
- Bluetooth
- Mobile Devices
- Summary
Attack and Defense
- Web Application Attacks
- Denial of Service Attacks
- Application Exploitation
- Lateral Movement
- Defense in Depth/Defense in Breadth
- Defensible Network Architecture
- Summary
Cryptography
- Basic Encryption
- Symmetric Key Cryptography
- Asymmetric Key Cryptography
- Certificate Authorities and Key Management
- Cryptographic Hashing
- PGP and S/MIME
- Summary
Security Architecture and Design
- Data Classification
- Security Models
- Application Architecture
- Security Architecture
- Summary
Security Foundations
- Creating a Personal Linux Firewall Using iptables
- Observing Syslog Messages
- Using Event Viewer
- Configuring Audit Policies in Windows
Footprinting and Reconnaissance
- Using the whois Program
- Using the theHarvester Tool
- Using Recon-ng to Gather Information
- Using Maltego to Gather Information
- Using the host Program
- Using nslookup
- Performing Zone Transfer Using dig
- Using dnsrecon to Perform Enumeration
- Mirroring Sites with HTTrack
Scanning Networks
- Using the fping Command
- Using the masscan Command
- Scanning a Port Using nmap
- Using the Zenmap Tool
- Using OpenVAS
- Using the hping Program
Enumeration
- Using the Metasploit SunRPC Scanner
- Using nmap for Enumerating Users
- Enumerating Data Using enum4linux
System Hacking
- Searching Exploits Using searchsploit
- Grabbing a Screenshot of a Target Machine Using Metasploit
- Exploiting Windows 7 Using Metasploit
- Cracking a Linux Password Using John the Ripper
- Cracking Windows Passwords
Malware
- Scanning Malware Using Antivirus
- Observing an MD5-Generated Hash Value
- Using the msfvenom Program
Sniffing
- Capturing Packets Using Wireshark
- Capturing Network Packets Using TCPdump
- Performing ARP Spoofing
Social Engineering
- Using the SET Tool
Attack and Defense
- Attacking a Website Using XSS Injection
- Exploiting a Website Using SQL Injection
Cryptography
- Using OpenSSL to Create a Public/Private Key Pair
- Observing an SHA-Generated Hash Value
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USD 500
ECC Exam and Pearson VUE
Multiple choice questions
The exam contains 125 questions.
240 minutes
This depends on the exam.
Here is the retake policy:
- If a candidate is not able to pass the exam on the first attempt, no cooling or waiting period is required to attempt the exam for the second time (1st retake).
- If a candidate is not able to pass the second attempt (1st retake), a waiting period of 14 days is required prior to attempting the exam for the third time (2nd retake).
- If a candidate is not able to pass the third attempt (2nd retake), a waiting period of 14 days is required prior to attempting the exam for the fourth time (3rd retake).
- If a candidate is not able to pass the fourth attempt (3rd retake), a waiting period of 14 days is required prior to attempting the exam for the fifth time (4th retake).
- A candidate is not allowed to take a given exam more than five times in 12-months (1 year) period and a waiting period of 12-months will be imposed before being allowed to attempt the exam for the sixth time (5th retake).
- Candidates who pass the exam are not allowed to attempt the same version of the exam for the second time.
Three years