Hacking Exposed VoIP: Voice Over IP Security Secrets & Solutions: Voice Over IP Security Secrets and Solutions
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Average customer review:Product Description
The internationally bestselling Hacking Exposed series now covers VoIP
New in the tried-and-true Hacking Exposed series is this comprehensive guide to security for Voice over IP. VoIP is a powerful new communications technology that is prone to attacks such as SPIT, Voicemail Brute forcing, Caller ID Spoofing, Registration Hijacking, active directory number harvesting, and more.
Hacking Exposed VoIP shows you how to proactively fuzz VoIP components for potential vulnerabilities using freely and commercially available tools. You will gain access to the companion website, which contains links to the latest tools, downloadable code samples, book updates, and more.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #333568 in Books
- Published on: 2007-01-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 539 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
Sidestep VoIP Catastrophe the Foolproof Hacking Exposed Way
"This book illuminates how remote users can probe, sniff, and modify your phones, phone switches, and networks that offer VoIP services. Most importantly, the authors offer solutions to mitigate the risk of deploying VoIP technologies." --Ron Gula, CTO of Tenable Network Security
Block debilitating VoIP attacks by learning how to look at your network and devices through the eyes of the malicious intruder. Hacking Exposed VoIP shows you, step-by-step, how online criminals perform reconnaissance, gain access, steal data, and penetrate vulnerable systems. All hardware-specific and network-centered security issues are covered alongside detailed countermeasures, in-depth examples, and hands-on implementation techniques. Inside, you'll learn how to defend against the latest DoS, man-in-the-middle, call flooding, eavesdropping, VoIP fuzzing, signaling and audio manipulation, Voice SPAM/SPIT, and voice phishing attacks.
- Find out how hackers footprint, scan, enumerate, and pilfer VoIP networks and hardware
- Fortify Cisco, Avaya, and Asterisk systems
- Prevent DNS poisoning, DHCP exhaustion, and ARP table manipulation
- Thwart number harvesting, call pattern tracking, and conversation eavesdropping
- Measure and maintain VoIP network quality of service and VoIP conversation quality
- Stop DoS and packet flood-based attacks from disrupting SIP proxies and phones
- Counter REGISTER hijacking, INVITE flooding, and BYE call teardown attacks
- Avoid insertion/mixing of malicious audio
- Learn about voice SPAM/SPIT and how to prevent it
- Defend against voice phishing and identity theft scams
About the Author
David Endler is the Director of Security Research for TippingPoint, a division of 3Com. Previously, he performed security research for Xerox Corporation, the NSA, and MIT. Endler is also the chairman and founder of the Voice over IP Security Alliance.
Mark Collier is CTO for SecureLogix Corporation. He is an expert author and frequent presenter on the topic of VoIP security. Collier is also a founding member of the Voice over IP Security Alliance.
Customer Reviews
Invaluable VoIP Security Handbook
In this book David Endler and Mark Collier have pulled together a vast wealth of material about hacking VoIP networks at every possible level. More than this, they have also created new value in the form of software test tools, which they have published on an accompanying website. It really is a must-have reference book for anyone working in VoIP.
Chapter 1 talks about Google hacking, or in other words, using the Internet to find out things about a target network. They show that Google can be a crucial tool in finding out what type of hardware and software you use in your VoIP networks, and in some cases will give vital clues even about how to login to the management systems of your network from the Internet. If this doesn't scare the bejesus out of you, then proceed on to further chapters about more VoIP-specific issues.
Chapters 2 and 3 detail the kind of tools a hacker might use to scan your network and enumerate all the devices, i.e. build their own map of how your network is laid out, right down to the telephone numbers and MAC addresses of desktop phones. Chapter 4 talks about Denial-of-Service, and the kind of attack resources that hackers might use to cripple a telephony network.
Chapter 5 is on VoIP eavesdropping, talking about some existing tools that can be used for this (Oreka, Wireshark and the unpleasantly named vomit), and as in the earlier chapters, some suggestions on how to defend against such a type of threat. Chapter 6 goes further to explain how a VoIP man-in-the-middle attack might be mounted, giving the possibility not just to listen, but to modify, replace or remix the audio stream.
Chapters 7, 8, 9 talk about specific platform threats, namely to Cisco Unified CallManager, Avaya Communication Manager and the Asterisk PBX. The vendors have added their own comment to these chapters, at the request of the authors. Chapter 10 takes in Softphones, including Google Talk, Gizmo, Yahoo and of course the ever popular Skype.
Chapter 11 describes VoIP fuzzing, or in other words, testing protocol stacks for flaws, so this is useful for those developing VoIP systems and applications. Chapter 12 talks about disruption of networks using flooding techniques and chapter 13 talks about Signaling and Media Manipulation.
The final section of the book is entitled Social Threats, and talks about SPAM over Internet Telephony (SPIT) in Chapter 14, followed by Voice Phishing in Chapter 15. Neither of these threats are in frequent use yet, but their use is certain to increase in the future, so this is a good moment to get to grips with what this means.
This is a highly technical book, but for managers responsible for IT security but not immersed in the details I would say this: buy the book, and read the case studies. There are five sections to the book, and each starts with a short case study. Invest 20 minutes in reading these, and you will start to get an appreciation for how important VoIP Security will be in the future. Then pass the book on to your hands-on security guy and tell him to read it from cover to cover.



