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Book Cover
E-book
Author Hoglund, Greg

Title Rootkits : subverting the Windows kernel / Greg Hoglund, James Butler
Published Upper Saddle River, NJ : Addison-Wesley, 2005

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Description 1 online resource
Contents 1. Leave no trace -- 2. Subverting the kernel -- 3. hardware connection -- 4. age-old art of hooking -- 5. Runtime patching -- 6. Layered drivers -- 7. Direct kernel object manipulation -- 8. Hardware manipulation -- 9. Covert channels -- 10. Rootkit detection
Summary "It's imperative that everybody working in the field of cyber-security read this book to understand the growing threat of rootkits." --Mark Russinovich, editor, Windows IT Pro / Windows & .NET Magazine "This material is not only up-to-date, it defines up-to-date. It is truly cutting-edge. As the only book on the subject, Rootkits will be of interest to any Windows security researcher or security programmer. It's detailed, well researched and the technical information is excellent. The level of technical detail, research, and time invested in developing relevant examples is impressive. In one word: Outstanding." --Tony Bautts, Security Consultant; CEO, Xtivix, Inc. "This book is an essential read for anyone responsible for Windows security. Security professionals, Windows system administrators, and programmers in general will want to understand the techniques used by rootkit authors. At a time when many IT and security professionals are still worrying about the latest e-mail virus or how to get all of this month's security patches installed, Mr. Hoglund and Mr. Butler open your eyes to some of the most stealthy and significant threats to the Windows operating system. Only by understanding these offensive techniques can you properly defend the networks and systems for which you are responsible." --Jennifer Kolde, Security Consultant, Author, and Instructor "What's worse than being owned? Not knowing it. Find out what it means to be owned by reading Hoglund and Butler's first-of-a-kind book on rootkits. At the apex the malicious hacker toolset--which includes decompilers, disassemblers, fault-injection engines, kernel debuggers, payload collections, coverage tools, and flow analysis tools--is the rootkit. Beginning where Exploiting Software left off, this book shows how attackers hide in plain sight. "Rootkits are extremely powerful and are the next wave of attack technology. Like other types of malicious code, rootkits thrive on stealthiness. They hide away from standard system observers, employing hooks, trampolines, and patches to get their work done. Sophisticated rootkits run in such a way that other programs that usually monitor machine behavior can't easily detect them. A rootkit thus provides insider access only to people who know that it is running and available to accept commands. Kernel rootkits can hide files and running processes to provide a backdoor into the target machine. "Understanding the ultimate attacker's tool provides ..
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. 2006
Print version record
SUBJECT Microsoft Windows (Computer file)
Microsoft Windows (Computer file) fast
Subject Computer security
Computers -- Access control.
Computer security
Computers -- Access control
Engineering & Applied Sciences.
Computer Science.
Form Electronic book
Author Butler, James
ISBN 9780321294319
0321294319