Which of the following is a software application that pretend to be a server on the Internet and is not set up purposely to actively protect against break-ins?
A. Bastion host
B. Honey pot
C. Dual Homed
D. Demilitarize Zone (DMZ)
A. Bastion host
B. Honey pot
C. Dual Homed
D. Demilitarize Zone (DMZ)
Correct Answer: B
Explanation:
Explanation:
A Honey pot is a software application or system that pretends to be a normal server on the internet and it is not set up actively protect against all break-ins. In purpose, some of the updates, patches, or upgrades are missing.
You then monitor the honey pot to learn from the offensive side.
There are two types of honey pot:
High-interaction Honey pots – Essentially gives hacker a real environment to attack. High-interaction honey pots imitate the activities of the production systems that host a variety of services and, therefore, an attacker may be allowed a lot of services to waste his time. According to recent research into high-interaction honey pot technology, by employing virtual machines, multiple honey pots can be hosted on a single physical machine. Therefore, even if the honey pot is compromised, it can be restored more quickly.
In general, high-interaction honey pots provide more security by being difficult to detect, but they are highly expensive to maintain. If virtual machines are not available, one honey pot must be maintained for each physical computer, which can be exorbitantly expensive. Example: Honey net.
Low interaction – Emulate production environment and therefore, provide more limited information. Low-interaction honey pots simulate only the services frequently requested by attackers. Since they consume relatively few resources, multiple virtual machines can easily be hosted on one physical system, the virtual systems have a short response time, and less code is required, reducing the complexity of the virtual system’s security. Example: Honeyed.
The following were incorrect answers:
Bastion host – On the Internet, a bastion host is the only host computer that a company allows to be addressed directly from the public network and that is designed to screen the rest of its network from security exposure. DMZ or Demilitarize Zone In computer networks, a DMZ (demilitarized zone) is a computer host or small network inserted as a “neutral zone” between a company’s private network and the outside public network. It prevents outside users from getting direct access to a server that has company data.
Dual Homed – Dual-homed or dual-homing can refer to either an Ethernet device that has more than one network interface, for redundancy purposes, or in firewall technology, dual-homed is one of the firewall architectures for implementing preventive security.
Dual-Homed – An example of dual-homed devices are enthusiast computing motherboards that incorporate dual Ethernet network interface cards or a firewall with two network interface cards. One facing the external network and one facing the internal network.
Reference:
CISA review manual 2014 Page number 348 http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/definition/bastion-host http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/definition/DMZ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeypot_%28computing%29 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual-homed
A Honey pot is a software application or system that pretends to be a normal server on the internet and it is not set up actively protect against all break-ins. In purpose, some of the updates, patches, or upgrades are missing.
You then monitor the honey pot to learn from the offensive side.
There are two types of honey pot:
High-interaction Honey pots – Essentially gives hacker a real environment to attack. High-interaction honey pots imitate the activities of the production systems that host a variety of services and, therefore, an attacker may be allowed a lot of services to waste his time. According to recent research into high-interaction honey pot technology, by employing virtual machines, multiple honey pots can be hosted on a single physical machine. Therefore, even if the honey pot is compromised, it can be restored more quickly.
In general, high-interaction honey pots provide more security by being difficult to detect, but they are highly expensive to maintain. If virtual machines are not available, one honey pot must be maintained for each physical computer, which can be exorbitantly expensive. Example: Honey net.
Low interaction – Emulate production environment and therefore, provide more limited information. Low-interaction honey pots simulate only the services frequently requested by attackers. Since they consume relatively few resources, multiple virtual machines can easily be hosted on one physical system, the virtual systems have a short response time, and less code is required, reducing the complexity of the virtual system’s security. Example: Honeyed.
The following were incorrect answers:
Bastion host – On the Internet, a bastion host is the only host computer that a company allows to be addressed directly from the public network and that is designed to screen the rest of its network from security exposure. DMZ or Demilitarize Zone In computer networks, a DMZ (demilitarized zone) is a computer host or small network inserted as a “neutral zone” between a company’s private network and the outside public network. It prevents outside users from getting direct access to a server that has company data.
Dual Homed – Dual-homed or dual-homing can refer to either an Ethernet device that has more than one network interface, for redundancy purposes, or in firewall technology, dual-homed is one of the firewall architectures for implementing preventive security.
Dual-Homed – An example of dual-homed devices are enthusiast computing motherboards that incorporate dual Ethernet network interface cards or a firewall with two network interface cards. One facing the external network and one facing the internal network.
Reference:
CISA review manual 2014 Page number 348 http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/definition/bastion-host http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/definition/DMZ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeypot_%28computing%29 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual-homed