Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) spoofing, also known as ARP poisoning or ARP Poison Routing (APR), is a technique used to attack an Ethernet wired or wireless network. ARP spoofing may allow an attacker to sniff data frames on a local area network (LAN), modify the traffic, or stop the traffic altogether.
The principle of ARP spoofing is to send fake ARP messages to an Ethernet LAN. What steps can be used as a countermeasure of ARP spoofing?
Each correct answer represents a complete solution. Choose all that apply.
Adam works as a Network Administrator for PassGuide Inc. He wants to prevent the network from DOS attacks. Which
of the following is most useful against DOS attacks?
CORRECT TEXT
Fill in the blank with the appropriate term.
______ is a technique used to make sure that incoming packets are actually from the networks that they claim to be from.
You work as a Network Administrator for InformSec Inc. You find that the TCP port number 23476 is open on your server. You suspect that there may be a Trojan named Donald Dick installed on your server. Now you want to verify whether Donald Dick is installed on it or not. For this, you want to know the process running on port 23476, as well as the process id, process name, and the path of the process on your server. Which of the following applications will you most likely use to accomplish the task?
Adam works as a Penetration Tester for Umbrella Inc. A project has been assigned to him check the security of wireless network of the company. He re-injects a captured wireless packet back onto the network. He does this hundreds of times within a second. The packet is correctly encrypted and Adam assumes it is an ARP request packet. The wireless host responds with a stream of responses, all individually encrypted with different IVs.
Which of the following types of attack is Adam performing?