Module Summary

  • By placing a packet sniffer in a network, attackers can capture and analyze all the network traffic.
  • Attackers can sniff confidential information such as email and chat conversations, passwords, and web traffic.
  • Sniffing is broadly categorized as passive and active; passive sniffing refers to sniffing from a hub-based network, whereas active sniffing refers to sniffing from a switch-based network.
  • Networking layers in the OSI model are designed to work independently of each other; if a sniffer sniffs data in the Data Link layer, the upper OSI layer will not be aware of the problem.
  • Attackers use MAC attacks, DHCP attacks, ARP poisoning attacks, spoofing attacks, and DNS poisoning techniques to sniff network traffic.
  • Major countermeasures for sniffing include using static IP addresses and static ARP tables, and using encrypted sessions such as SSH instead of Telnet, Secure Copy (SCP) instead of FTP, SSL for data transmission.

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