Habits of Highly Malicious Hackers (black hat hackers):
Seven Habits of Highly Malicious Hackers (Dark console peoples)
Highly malicious hackers are black hat hackers.They are also the dark console people thats work only for himself. But they are dark web peoples. they are expert in computer and cybersecurity skills. Thay are also good programmers. Hackers such as black hat hacker are more powerful then whitehat and grey hat hackers because they have more information about hacking . because a hacker is the king of cyberworld. Interop session details the anatomy of a hacker attack, step-by-step
You can't defend against the cyber enemy if you don't know his movements or how he thinks. Sanjay Bavisi, presidet of security certification, training, and education organization EC-Council, at Interop Las Vegas next week will demonstrate step-by-step how a typical black-hat hacker executes an attack -- from reconnaissance to covering his tracks -- in the "Seven Habits of Highly Malicious Hackers" presentation.
Bavisi also will provide tips on how to protect yourself from each step, as well as a peek into the hacker psyche. He says he'll also show a case study of a hack with national security implications, and how ethical hacking is a successful way to stem attacks.
Here's the trajectory of a typical attack, according to Bavisi:
1. Footprinting
Basically
reconnaissance, where an attacker gathers information about his target.
"I'll show how hackers use social engineering to gain information, and
how they try to map out the network of their victim," Bavisi says.
Freeware footprinting tools such as Whois and Web the Ripper are popular
tools for gathering intelligence on the network, he says.
Attackers
also frequent newsgroups, the Internet Archive, and other sites for
bits and pieces of information on a target that can yield important
information about its operations, and possibly, its security.
"But the best footprinting is social engineering," says Bavisi, who will also demonstrate some footprinting tools in action.
2. Scanning
Vulnerability
scanning is the next step, where the attacker runs things like Nmap and
SuperScan to pinpoint any vulnerabilities in the victim's network. In
this step, the attacker goes into stealth mode, using proxy servers, for
instance, to avoid being traced or getting caught, Bavisi explains.
3. Exploiting known vulnerabilities
Armed
with information on where the weak spots are, the attacker then
launches the exploits. "They could breach the defense mechanisms using
tools like [Immunity] Canvas or Metasploit," Bavisi says.
"The most
common question I get is people saying 'I have AV and a firewall -- I
should be secure,'" he says. "Few understand how an attacker can easily
evade AV and a firewall just by understanding the digital signatures
most common Trojans have... and permeate the network defenses."
4. Creating viruses for the attack
Once
the attacker has figured out things like which ports are open, and
where known vulnerabilities in your network lie, he can unleash the
exploit and get inside. "Virus construction kits make it simple for them
to write viruses."
"Very few people understand what's happening here and how they can defend their organization," he adds. for more info about virus read this artical
5. Keylogging and escalation
Most
attacks are for financial gain, so the attacker needs a way to get
inside servers and workstations. He plants a keylogger to record
keystrokes and get logons and passwords, for instance. He runs
privilege-escalation tools to set the access to "admin" rather than just
an end user. "Then he can own the system and control it," Bavisi says.
6. Inserting a backdoor
Once
inside, the attacker needs to keep an entryway for himself in case the
admin or root passwords get changed. His communiqués with the backdoor
program look like legitimate network traffic, so no one's the wiser.
7. Erasing evidence
"I'll be showing how hackers use tools to eliminate evidence," he says.
Bavisi says he will also demonstrate at Interop how easy it is for an attacker to create a Trojan using a virus construction kit. "I'll show how they go about compiling a Trojan for a specific purpose, such as for formatting a hard disk, copying an address book, or for whatever I want."

