Description
Design your own USB Rubber Ducky Ethical Hacking tool! Design Your Own USB Rubber Ducky Ethical Hacking Tool Course! Published by Udemy Academy. Use an inexpensive microcontroller and the Arduino IDE to write your human interface device payloads for penetration testing.
It’s easy to install backdoors, extract documents, or grab credentials with an innocent-looking USB drive called the USB Rubber Ducky. An expert hacker with a few minutes, a photographic memory, and excellent typing accuracy can use a few well-crafted keystrokes to hack anything he has physical access to. However, the right hardware can do the same thing every time on demand without fail. This is where the Rubber Ducky and other Human Interface Devices (HID) come into play. They inject keystrokes at superhuman speeds, violating computers’ inherent trust in humans by posing as keyboards. In this class, we’ll learn more about what HID attacks are, how they work, the social engineering that can be involved in deploying them, and how to use them in your pen test interactions. Keyboards present themselves to computers as HID devices and are in turn automatically recognized and accepted. We program a microcontroller in Arduino to take advantage of this by acting as an HID device. We can then create our own scripts to run when the device is connected to the target computer. All this at a fraction of the cost of a better branded USB Rubber Ducky!
Students learn to use a low-cost Digispark to program their payloads for use in ethical hacking and penetration testing. We will be creating more advanced payloads, including trace payloads that run in the background, as well as Rickroll payloads that can be used with permission from friends and family to demonstrate how HID attacks work. In addition, students learn to automate almost anything on an unattended machine, which can be very useful when you need to run the same commands on a series of computers. This is how the original USB Rubber Ducky was invented. While working as a system admin, Hak5 founder Darren Kitchen got tired of typing the same commands to fix printers and network shares, over and over again, and the device evolved out of laziness. He programmed a development board to mimic typing for him – and so the keystroke injection attack was born.
What is in the training course Design your own USB Rubber Ducky Ethical Hacking tool! You will learn:
- Hacking with human interface devices
- Writing your first ethical hack
- Create advanced tracking shipments
- How social engineering and HID attacks work
- Basics of Arduino IDE
Who is this course suitable for:
- Beginner Ethical Hackers
- Beginner Whitehat Hackers
- Computer science students
- Cyber security students
- Beginners who are interested in hacking
- Beginners interested in programming
Course details
- Publisher: Yudmi
- teacher: Kody Kinzie
- English language
- Education level: introductory
- Number of courses: 26
- Training duration: 2 hours and 14 minutes
Course headings
Course prerequisites
Computer running MacOS, Linux, or Windows
Arduino IDE installed (free)
Digispark ATTiny85 USB Development Board (~$2 each)
Useful but not required: Basic knowledge of Arduino IDE & terminal commands
Pictures
Course introduction video
Installation guide
After Extract, view with your favorite Player.
Subtitle: None
Quality: 720p
download link
Password file(s): www.downloadly.ir
Size
2.29 GB
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