Exploit types
- Phishing, SQL, Brute Force DDOS
Teaming
- Red teams, blue teams, purple teams
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Pen testing tools
open source, enterprise, or an arsenal
Vulnerability scanning
Pen testing services
Pen Test Pivoting
The phrase “you’ve got to walk before you can run” is something that we’ve all heard and rolled our eyes at least once in our lives after we’ve attempted an advanced skill before mastering the basics. The saying is unfortunately very accurate when it comes to cybersecurity.
Advancing your vulnerability management programme may be a journey, but it is a journey well worth taking and cannot be done overnight. As your programme matures the better your organisation can avoid costly attacks and breaches that may harm your business and reputation.
Once upon a time, it was often necessary to define the term “ransomware” as it was frequently met with questioning looks and the need for clarification. Nowadays, you can hardly go a day without hearing about some sort of attack. What has made ransomware such a pervasive threat, and how can organizations learn to better protect themselves?
While the Core Impact team is hard at work to provide and enhance the most comprehensive pen testing tool, we want to be sure to regularly check in with those who matter most—our customers! That’s why we pull back the curtain every quarter to provide a look behind the scenes and show you what’s on the horizon.
During June's exclusive user-focused webinar, the product experts dedicated to your success covered:
The F5 BIG-IP iControl REST vulnerability, a critical authentication bypass vulnerability that leads to unauthenticated remote code execution, is quite simple to exploit and provides an attacker with a method to execute arbitrary system commands as root.
With Core Impact and Cobalt Strike, security professionals can execute multi-faceted assessments of an organization’s defenses, exposing high-risk security weaknesses and offering targeted advice to better protect critical assets.
You’ve completed a pen test and, not surprisingly, the offensive security exercise turned up multiple weak points and exploitable vulnerabilities across your enterprise environment.
The cybersecurity world has so many acronyms, and yet we pretend to know what all of them are. However, there are many occasions that leave us wracking our brains, trying to remember what one stands for. Is it a product? An organization? A process? One acronym that everyone should know is OWASP—the Open Web Application Security Project.
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