Genre: eLearning | MP4 | Video: h264, 1280×720 | Audio: aac, 44100 HzLanguage: English | Size: 6.49 GB | Duration: 8.5 hoursWhat you’ll learnAdvanced techniques of creating exploits such as Egg Hunters, ASLR Bypass, Function reuse etc.
Writing Unicode compatible exploitsHow to do long and short jumps in exploitsHow to do stack pivotingFuzzing through Spike, Peach Fuzzer, FilFuzz and BooFuzzCreating Peach Pits, BooFuzz scripts and fuzzing scripts in PythonHow to tackle restrictive conditions such as limited buffer space or limited character setCreate exploits from scratch for complicated file-formats such as ZIPManually encoding shellcodeRequirementsBasic knowledge of x86 Assembly LanguageBasic knowledge of Kali LinuxBasic knowledge of PythonBasic knowledge of MetasploitBasic concepts of fuzzingBasic knowledge of Immunity DebuggerDescriptionNote: To know about offers on this course, check out our website yaksas-dot-ioAbout this courseThis course builds upon my previous course, Hands-on Exploit Development on Udemy.
It will teach you advanced techniques of exploiting a buffer overflow vulnerability.
Egg hunters, ASLR bypass, Stack Pivoting, Function Reuse, Manual encoding are some of the techniques covered in this course.
It follows the six stages of exploit development and gives a detailed walk-through of each.
Each module starts by identifying the vulnerability via fuzzing.
You’ll learn, server fuzzing (using Spike) and file format fuzzing (using Peach Fuzzer).
It then shows you how to create a PoC to trigger the vulnerability and convert that PoC into a working exploit.
Through this course you will get introduced to various tools such as Immunity Debugger, Mona library for Immunity Debugger, Metasploit, msfvenom, Spike, Peach Fuzzer, BooFuzz and much more.
This course is designed to be short and concise yet packed with practical knowledge.
Each video includes learning resources (in video) and associated files (pdf slides, fuzzing scripts, peach pit python script etc.). You can just follow along and create a working exploit. It’s that simple. Happy hacking!What our fellow students say about this course“I have been looking for resources to learn different techniques of exploit development. This course was a great find. It is very easy to follow along and understand the concepts.” – Surbhi Goel“Great! More fuzzing tools are introduced.” – Ying-Chen Chiou“pretty good basics,easy to follow buffer overflow” – Arun MathewWho this course is for:Students curious about building exploitsEthical HackersPenetration TestersCybersecurity ProfessionalsPeople preparing for OSCP, OSCE etc.