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    • First Half of the Semester
      • Week 1: Course Introduction
      • Week 2: Meterpreter, Avoiding Detection, Client Side Attacks, and Auxiliary Modules
      • Week 3: Social Engineering Toolkit, SQL Injection, Karmetasploit, Building Modules in Metasploit, and Creating Exploits
      • Week 4: Porting Exploits, Scripting, and Simulating Penetration Testing
      • Week 5: Independent Study – Perform Metasploit Attack and Create Presentation
      • Week 6: Ettercap
      • Week 7: Introduction to OWASP’s WebGoat application
    • Second Half of the Semester
      • Week 8: Independent Study
      • Week 9: Introduction to Wireless Security
      • Week 10: Wireless Recon, WEP, and WPA2
      • Week 11: WPA2 Enterprise, Wireless beyond WiFi
      • Week 12: Jack the Ripper, Cain and Able, Delivery of Sample Operating Systems
      • Week 13: Independent Study – Analyze provided Operating System Samples and Create Assessment Report
      • Week 14: Deliver Assessment to Operating System Class either in person or via teleconferenc
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MIS 5212-Advanced Penetration Testing

MIS 5212 - Section 001 - Wade Mackey

Fox School of Business

Nearly 2000 WordPress Websites Infected with a Keylogger

February 10, 2018 by Elizabeth V Calise Leave a Comment

Over 2,000 WordPress websites have been found infected with a piece of Crypto-mining malware. The malware does not only steal the resources of visitors’ computers to mind digital currencies, but also logs visitors’ every keystroke. Researchers have discovered a malicious campaign that infects WordPress websites with a malicious script that delivers an in-browser cryptocurrency miner from Coinhive and a keylogger.

Coinhive is a popular browser-based service that offers website owners to embed JavaScript to utilize CPUs power of their website visitors in an effort to mine the Monero cryptocurrency. Researchers also stated that the actors behind this new campaign are the same ones who infected more than 5,000 WordPress websites last month. They identified this since both campaigns used keylogger/cryptocurrency malware called cloudfire[.]solutions.

Cloudfire[.]solutions is a cryptocurrency mining malware and is not related to network management and cybersecurity firm Cloudflare. Since the malware used cloudfire[.]solutions domain to spread the malware, it has been given this name.

https://thehackernews.com/2018/01/wordpress-keylogger.html

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