Honeynet Project Scan of the Month Challenges are BACK with a vengeance! Today we announce a new type of challenge: an Analysis Challenge. Scan of the Month #30 offers you an opportunity to draw your conclusions from a massive pool of honeynet firewall log data. Questions to guide your creativity in the analysis process are provided. . . .. Scan 30 This month's challenge is different. Traditional SotM challenges have been about analyzing specific attacks against specific honeypots. This time we are going to take a step back and look at the bigger picture. Your job is to analyze a months worth of connection activity to and from a honeynet by analyzing the firewall logs. This is where analysis of any honeynet most often begins. All entries are due Friday, 26 March. Results will be released Friday, 2 April. Find the rules and suggestions for submissions at the SotM Home Page. Skill Level: Intermediate The Challenge: We provided some questions below to focus your analysis process. It is expected that the best entries will go above and beyond the questions and provide more insight on what really was going on. Also, for some of the questions there is no single "correct" answer". Even having access to full packet logs, we might not now what really took place. Thus, a good compelling argument backed by creative research methodology may count just as highly as a true answer! And earn a prize! Top 3 entries will receive a signed copy of the book Security Warrior. If you want some guiding ideas on where to start your analysis process, look for SANS GCIA certification practicals through Part III of various completed practicals posted above for many creative log analysis tools and possible conclusions from pools of log data. The link for this article located at honeynet.org is no longer available. . Scan 30This month's challenge is different. Traditional SotM challenges have been about analyzing sp. honeynet, project, month, challenges, vengeance, today, announce. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
In a further attempt to enable defenders to learn from the hacking experience itself, The Honeynet Project, which was established by a group of computer security researchers, set up the Reverse Challenge. The test was to make a full analysis of. . .. In a further attempt to enable defenders to learn from the hacking experience itself, The Honeynet Project, which was established by a group of computer security researchers, set up the Reverse Challenge. The test was to make a full analysis of an unknown program code found on a compromised honeynet system, using the reverse engineering tools and techniques used by security specialists. The Challenge, the results of which were released this month, followed in the footsteps of its predecessor, The Forensic Challenge, launched in January 2001. "The binary was downloaded over 5,000 times. The challenge required highly sophisticated skills, so we were excited to see so many people try it out," organiser of the Reverse Challenge, Lance Spitzner, told ZDNet Australia. With stringent documentation required, just 35 contestants from across the globe decoded the challenge and submitted their findings in full -- and the winner was 27-year-old Australian Dion Mendel. Mendel's involvement was out of "professional curiosity" as well as the challenge to learn something new. A computer programmer by trade, Mendel's interest in computing is that it provides a wealth of puzzles to be solved. "Unfortunately, it is also addictive," he said. "I have been told that reverse engineering and de-compiling are extremely difficult tasks. I wished to see if this were true," Mendel said. Furthermore, he added, the challenge provided an opportunity to see just what the technical capabilities of crackers are. Mendel spent 80 hours participating in the challenge, 25 of which were spent writing up the prerequisite documentation. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The Honeynet Project's Reverse Challenge offers cyber defenders a hands-on hackingexperience to confront real-world threats and refine their skills in threat detection. Honeynet Project, Reverse Engineering, Cybersecurity Training. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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