Shoulder Surfing
Shoulder surfing is using direct observation
techniques, such as looking over someone's shoulder, to get information.
Shoulder surfing is an effective way to get information in crowded places
because it's relatively easy to stand next to someone and watch as they fill
out a form, enter a PIN number at an ATM machine, or use a calling card at a
public pay phone. Shoulder surfing can also be done long distance with the aid
of binoculars or other vision-enhancing devices. To prevent shoulder surfing,
experts recommend that you shield paperwork or your keypad from view by using
your body or cupping your hand.
Dumpster Diving
Dumpster diving is a technique
used to retrieve information that could be used to carry out an attack on a
computer network. Dumpster diving isn't limited to searching through the trash
for obvious treasures like access codes or passwords written down on sticky
notes. Seemingly innocent information like a phone list, calendar, or
organizational chart can be used to assist an attacker using social engineering
techniques to gain access to the network. To prevent dumpster divers from
learning anything valuable from your trash, experts recommend that your company
establish a disposal policy where all paper, including print-outs, is shredded
in a cross-cut shredder before being recycled, all storage media is erased, and
all staff is educated about the danger of untracked trash.
Sniffers
A sniffer is a program that
monitors and analyzes network traffic, detecting bottlenecks and problems.
Using this information, a network manager can keep traffic flowing efficiently.
A sniffer can also be used legitimately or
illegitimately to capture data being transmitted on a network. A network router
reads every packet of data passed to it, determining whether it is intended for
a destination within the router's own network or whether it should be passed
further along the Internet. A router with a sniffer, however, may be able to
read the data in the packet as well as the source and destination addresses.
Sniffers are often used on academic networks to prevent traffic bottlenecks
caused by file-sharing applications.
Trojan
really very nice contents ....keep it up and all the very best .. :)
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