CEH Certified Ethical Hacker, 4th edition
Prerequisite: MIS 324 and MIS 352.
This course advances students' knowledge of penetration testing, network vulnerabilities, and hacking. Topics include analyzing advance techniques for circumventing network security hardware and software. Upon completion, students should be able to assemble test kits for multiple operating systems, and scan footprint networks.
Week of Monday: | Reading | Assignments |
---|---|---|
16 August | Introduction | Get book/labs |
23 August | RBC: CH 1, Getting Started: Essential Knowledge | TQ: Vocab [due 29Aug@2359] HO: Introduction to Ethical Hacking [due 29Aug@2359] |
30 August | RBC: CH 2, Reconnaissance: Information Gathering for the Ethical Hacker | TQ: Vocab [due 5Sep@2359] HO: Footprinting and Reconnaissance [due 5Sep@2359] |
6 September | Labor Day - no class RBC: CH 3, Scanning and Enumeration |
TQ: Vocab [due 12Sep@2359] HO: Scanning Networks [due 12Sep@2359] HO: Enumeration [due 12Sep@2359] |
13 September | RBC: CH 4, Sniffing and Evasion | TQ: Vocab [due 19Sep@2359] HO: Sniffing [due 19Sep@2359] HO: Vulnerability Analysis [due 19Sep@2359] |
20 September | RBC: CH 5, Attacking a System | TQ: Vocab [due 26Sep@2359] HO: Evading Firewalls [due 26Sep@2359] |
27 September | RBC: CH 6, Web-Based Hacking: Servers and Applications | TQ: Vocab [due 3Oct@2359] HO: System Hacking [due 3Oct@2359] |
4 October | RBC: CH 7, Wireless Network Hacking | TQ: Vocab [due 10Oct@2359] HO: Hacking Web Servers [due 10Oct@2359] HO: Hacking Web Applications [due 10Oct@2359] |
11 October | RBC: CH 8, Mobile Communications and the IoT | TQ: Vocab [due 17Oct@2359] HO: SQL Injection [due 17Oct@2359] HO: Hacking Wireless Networks [due 17Oct@2359] |
18 October | RBC: CH 9, Security in Cloud Computing | TQ: Vocab [due 24Oct@2359] HO: IoT Hacking [due 24Oct@2359] HO: Hacking Mobile Phone Platforms [due 24Oct@2359] |
25 October | RBC: CH 10, Trojans and Other Attacks | TQ: Vocab [due 31Oct@2359] HO: Cloud Computing [due 31Oct@2359] |
1 November | RBC: CH 11, Cryptography NOTE: 3 Nov. Pre-recorded class; Prof Stoker traveling |
TQ: Vocab [due 7Nov@2359] HO: Malware Threats [due 7Nov@2359] HO: Denial of Service [due 7Nov@2359] HO: Session Hijacking [due 7Nov@2359] |
8 November | RBC: CH 12, Low Tech: Social Engineering and Physical Security | TQ: Vocab [due 14Nov@2359] HO: Cryptography [due 14Nov@2359] HO: Steganography [due 14Nov@2359] |
15 November | RBC: CH 13, The Pen Test: Putting It All Together | TQ: Vocab [due 21Nov@2359] HO: Social Engineering [due 21Nov@2359] |
22 November | Project Presentations | Thanksgiving break - no class Wed |
29 November | Project Presentations | Review/Wrap-up |
Final Exam | 6 December, **Monday, (0800-1100) |
RBC = Read Before Class; TQ = Take Quiz; HO = Hands-on
As a student at The University of North Carolina Wilmington, I am committed to honesty and
truthfulness in academic inquiry and in the pursuit of knowledge. I pledge to uphold and promote
the UNCW Student Academic Honor Code.
The University of North Carolina Wilmington is a community of high academic standards where
academic integrity is valued. UNCW students are committed to honesty and truthfulness in
academic inquiry and in the pursuit of knowledge. This commitment begins when new students
matriculate at UNCW, continues as they create work of the highest quality while part of the
university community, and endures as a core value throughout their lives.
Please read and be familiar with the UNCW Student Academic Honor Code. I have highlighted some parts that are particularly relevant to courses I teach here.
Academic dishonesty in any form will not be tolerated in this class.
It is a matter of UNC system policy that you should expect to be committed for an average of 8.5 hours per week (hpw) to this class (or any 3-credit hour class you take at UNCW).
A credit hour is defined as one 50-minute meeting of face-to-face instruction per week for 15 weeks, plus a minimum of 2 hours per week for 15 weeks of out-of-class student work.
A: (avg >= 90)
B: (90 > avg) and (avg >= 80)
C: (80 > avg) and (avg >= 70)
D: (70 > avg) and (avg >= 60)
5% Vocab Quizzes
50% Labs
25% Project
20% Final
An assignment submitted after the due time/date will not generally be graded and will receive zero (0) points. It does not matter if it is 20 minutes late or 2 weeks late.
There are two exceptions to this policy:
There is no specified extra credit in this class. I may, on occasion, subjectively award extra credit for assignment solutions that demonstrate meaningful, functional effort beyond the norm.
I will offer opportunities to meet both in class and on Zoom. If you think it is to your benefit to attend, please do so. Otherwise, you will not be penalized for non-attendance.
The best way to contact me is via email. When writing me email, please, indicate your class AND section number. Also, be clear/concise: start with your question and then provide supporting details. You do not need to tell me how hard you have been working or how confused you are. Example
If you post questions in the assignment comment section in Canvas, I will likely not see it - don't do that.
Students are to do a health check each day before coming to campus. Students who experience COVID-19 symptoms should immediately contact the Abrons Student Health Center at (910) 962-3280. If a student becomes ill, s/he should let the professor know and must not attend the course in-person. If a student is too ill to attend virtually, they will be given the opportunity to complete the material asynchronously.
In the event that UNCW closes, students will be given an assignment to make up for 1 week of missed class time. This will be emailed to students within two days of the UNCW closing announcement. In the event that the rest of the semester is online, students need to be prepared by having reliable internet access, a webcam, and a microphone.
If you are a student with a disability and need accommodations, you must be registered with Disability Services (DePaolo Hall, 910.962.7555). Please provide your Accommodations Letter within the first week of class or as soon as possible. You should then meet with your instructor to make mutually agreed upon arrangements based upon the recommendations in the Accommodations Letter. For additional information, please see UNCW Disability.
UNCW takes all forms of interpersonal violence very seriously. When students disclose, first- or third-hand, to faculty or staff about sexual misconduct, domestic violence, dating violence and/or stalking, this information must be reported to the administration in order to ensure that students' rights are protected, appropriate resources are offered, and the need for further investigation is explored to maintain campus safety. There are three confidential resources who do not need to report interpersonal violence: UNCW CARE, the Student Health Center, and the Counseling Center. If you want to speak to someone in confidence, these resources are available, including CARE's 24-hour crisis line (910-512-4821). For more information, please visit www.uncw.edu/care
This course is subject to the Code of Student Life of the University of North Carolina Wilmington (the Code). The full Code is found here Code of Student Life. UNCW practices zero tolerance for violence and harassment of any kind. For emergencies, contact UNCW CARE at 910.962.2273 or Campus Police at 910.962.3184. For University or community resources visit Safe Relate Campus Resources.
In accordance with NC SL 2010-211, students are entitled to two excused absences for religious observances per academic year. These absences must be requested using the form provided on SeaNet, under "Student Services." These requests must be submitted by the student prior to the absence. Once the request is submitted, an email will be sent to all impacted instructors automatically. There is no need to send additional notification to instructors or the Registrar's Office. Any absence for religious purposes will be considered unexcused unless the appropriate form is submitted.
In the pursuit of excellence, UNC Wilmington actively fosters, encourages, and promotes inclusiveness, mutual respect, acceptance, and open-mindedness among students, faculty, staff and the broader community.
Therefore, we expect members of the campus community to honor these principles as fundamental to our ongoing efforts to increase access to and inclusion in a community that nurtures learning and growth for all.