Social Engineering Fundamentals
This article defines social engineering as a hacker’s clever manipulation of the natural human tendency to trust, with the goal of obtaining information that will allow him/her to gain unauthorized access to a valued system and the information |
944 |
Netcat and Yescat
The first but secondary purpose of this article is to introduce you this nifty networking tool: /usr/bin/netcat which is well available from the Debian GNU/Linux under the package name netcat. (The drill: apt-get install netcat and you're done.) Ther |
1034 |
How to Design a Useful Incident Response Policy
This documentation aims to help you with an important facet of any information security program: the incident response policy. |
913 |
Security Document Archive
Collection of archived security documents. Documents include security management, contingency planning, system configuration, standards, and methodologies. |
1015 |
DoE: First Responder's Manual
This manual "is designed as a guide concerning the initial response to a computer incident for both system administrators and security personnel." |
1063 |
Comparison of the Security of Windows NT and UNIX
This documentation presents a brief comparison of two operating systems, Windows NT and UNIX. The comparison covers two different aspects. First, we compare the main security features of the two operating systems and then we make a comparison of a se |
1401 |
Intro to the OCTAVE(SM) Method of Risk Analysis
This documentation discusses the Operationally Critical Threat, Asset, and Vulnerability Evaluation (OCTAVESM). This evaluation defines the essential components of a comprehensive, systematic, context-driven information security risk evaluation. |
906 |