EC Council Certified Security Analyst, ECSA is an advanced ethical hacking training certification that complements the Certified Ethical Hacker, CEH certification by exploring the analytical phase of ethical hacking.
Audience>
The EC-Council's exam 412-79 to achieve EC-Council Certified Security Analyst (ECSA) certification. This is a also one of the prerequisites for EC Councils LPT certification.
Outline>
ECCSA Curriculum consists of instructor-led training.
Modules:
The Need for Security Analysis
Advanced Googling
TCP/IP Packet Analysis
Advanced Sniffing Techniques
Vulnerability Analysis with Nessus
Advanced Wireless Testing
Designing a DMZ
Snort Analysis
Log Analysis
Advanced Exploits and Tools
Pen Testing Methodologies
Customers and Legal Agreements
Rules of Engagement
Penetration Testing Planning and Scheduling
Pre Penetration Testing Checklist
Information Gathering
Vulnerability Analysis
External Penetration Testing
Internal Network Penetration Testing
Routers and Switches Penetration Testing
Firewall Penetration Testing
IDS Penetration Testing
Wireless Network Penetration Testing
Denial of Service Penetration Testing
Password Cracking Penetration Testing
Social Engineering Penetration Testing
Stolen Laptop, PDAs and Cell phones Penetration Testing
Application Penetration Testing
Physical Security Penetration Testing
Database Penetration testing
VoIP Penetration Testing
VPN Penetration Testing
War Dialling
Virus and Trojan Detection
Log Management Penetration Testing
File Integrity Checking
Blue Tooth and Hand held Device Penetration Testing
Telecommunication and Broadband Communication Penetration Testing
Email Security Penetration Testing
Security Patches Penetration Testing
Data Leakage Penetration Testing
Penetration Testing Deliverables and Conclusion
Penetration Testing Report and Documentation Writing
Penetration Testing Report Analysis
Post Testing Actions
Ethics of a Licensed Penetration Tester
Standards and Compliance
Our Clients
Our clients have included prestigious national organisations such as Oxford University Press, multi-national private corporations such as JP Morgan and HSBC, as well
as public sector institutions such as the Department of Defence and the Department of Health.