CompTIA Security+ Certification is designed to certify one of the most important occupations in information technology. CompTIA Security+ Certification ensures persons with around 2 years experience that they are valuable to employers, and ensures to employers that their professional employees can do the job right! CompTIA Security+ Certification is a measurement of skill and success in networking that cannot be ignored. Correct CompTIA Security+ Certification training will only improve your occupational and intellectual worth. KeyStone’s unique interactive instructor led video-based CompTIA Security+ Certification training will get you where you need to be!
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CompTIA Security+ 2005 Certification: Introduction & General Security Concepts |
1.0 About this course
1.1 What is Security
1.2 Overview of course
1.3 About the certification exam
2.0 Access Control Models
2.1 Mandatory Access Control
2.2 Discretionary Access Control
2.3 Role Based Access Control
3.0 Authentication
3.1 CHAP
3.2 Kerberos
3.3 Certificate-based Authentication
3.4 Username and password
3.5 Tokens
3.6 Biometric Authentication
3.7 Multi-factor Authentication
3.8 Mutual Authentication
4.0 System Attack Prevention and Detection
4.1 System Scans
4.2 Auditing and Logging |
5.0 Attack Methods Identification and Prevention
5.1 Denial of Service Attacks
5.2 Distributed Denial of Service Attacks
5.3 Backdoor Attacks
5.4 Spoofing
5.5 Man in the Middle Attacks
5.6 Replay Attacks
5.7 TCP/IP Hijacking
5.8 Weak Keys
5.9 Mathematical Attacks
5.10 Password Guessing
5.11 Social Engineering
5.12 Birthday Attacks
5.13 Software Exploitation
6.0 Malicious Code and Malware
6.1 Viruses
6.2 Trojans
6.3 Logic Bombs
6.4 Worms
6.5 Malicious Code and Malware Risk Mitigation |
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CompTIA Security+ 2005 Certification: Cryptography |
1.0 Cryptography Concepts
1.1 Confidentiality
1.2 Integrity
1.3 Authentication
1.4 Non-repudiation
1.5 Access Control
2.0 Cryptographic Algorithms
2.1 Hashing Algorithms
2.2 Symmetric Algorithms
2.3 Asymmetric Algorithms
3.0 PKI
3.1 Certificates
3.2 Revocation
3.3 Trust Model |
4.0 Standards and Protocols
4.1 x.509
4.2 PKCS
4.3 Other Standards
5.0 Key Management
5.1 Centralized vs Decentralized
5.2 Storage
5.3 Escrow
5.4 Expiration
5.5 Revocation
5.6 Suspension
5.7 Recovery
5.8 Renewal
5.9 Destruction
5.10 Key Usage
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CompTIA Security+ 2005 Certification: Infrastructure Security |
1.0 Network Devices
1.1 Switches
1.2 Routers
1.3 Firewalls
1.4 Wireless Networks
1.5 Modems
1.6 RAS
1.7 Telecom/PBX(Private Brach Exchange)
1.8 VPN(Virtual Private Network)
1.9 IDS(Intrusion Detection System)
1.10 Network Monitoring/Diagnostics
1.11 Workstations
1.12 Servers
1.13 Mobile Devices
2.0 Network and Security Topologies
2.1 Security Topologies
2.2 Security Zones
2.3 VLANs(Virtual Local Area Networks)
2.4 NAT(Network Address Translation)
2.5 Tunneling
3.0 Network Media
3.1 Coaxial Cable
3.2 Twisted Pair(UTP and STP)
3.3 Fiber Optic Cable |
4.0 Removable Media
4.1 Diskettes
4.2 Hard Drives
4.3 CD-R and CD-RW
4.4 Tape
4.5 Flash Drives
4.6 Smart Cards
4.7 Removable Media Discarding and Disposal
5.0 Intrusion Detection
5.1 Host Based
5.2 Network Based
5.3 Honey Pots
5.4 Incident Response
6.0 Baselines and Hardening
6.1 OS/NOS Hardening
6.2 Network Hardening
6.3 Application Hardening |
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CompTIA Security+ 2005 Certification: Communication Security |
1.0 Remote Access Technologies and Vulnerabilities
1.1 802.x
1.2 VPN
1.3 RADIUS
1.4 TACACS
1.5 PPTP/L2TP
1.6 SSH
1.7 IPSEC
1.8 Remote Access Vulnerabilities
2.0 Internet Security
2.1 HTTP/HTTPs
2.2 SSL/TLS
2.3 Internet Vulnerabilities
3.0 File Transfer Security
3.1 S/FTP
3.2 Blind / Anonymous FTP
3.3 File Sharing
3.4 File Transfer Vulnerabilities |
4.0 Email and Messaging Security
4.1 S/MIME
4.2 PGP
4.3 Instant Messaging
4.4 Email and Messaging Vulnerabilities
5.0 Directory Security
5.1 LDAP/s
5.2 LDAP Vulnerabilities
6.0 Wireless Security
6.1 802.11 and 802.11x
6.2 WEP/WAP
6.3 WTLS
6.4 Vulnerabilities |
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CompTIA Security+ 2005 Certification: Operational and Organizational Security |
1.0 Physical Security
1.1 Access Control
1.2 Social Engineering
1.3 Environment
2.0 Privilege Management
2.1 User/Group/Role Management
2.2 Single Sign-On
2.3 Centralized vs Decentralized Management
2.4 Auditing(Privilege, Use, Escalation)
2.5 MAC/DAC/RBAC
3.0 Policies and Procedures
3.1 Security Policy
3.2 Incident Response Policy
3.3 Documentation
3.4 End User Education
4.0 Risk Analysis
4.1 Asset Identification
4.2 Risk Assessment
4.3 Threat Identification
4.4 Vulnerabilities |
5.0 Forensics
5.1 Chain of Custody
5.2 Preservation of Evidence
5.3 Collection of Evidence
6.0 Disaster Recovery
6.1 Backups
6.2 Off Site Storage
6.3 Secure Recovery
6.4 Alternate Sites
6.5 Disaster Recovery Plan
7.0 Business Continuity
7.1 Utilities
7.2 High Availability / Fault Tolerance
7.3 Backup Restoration
8.0 Recap of Course |
CompTIA Security+ Certification training is a complete CompTIA Security+ Certification exam preparation course. Everything from attack methods like TCP/IP hijacking to malicious code and malware will only start the CompTIA Security+ Certification training course. CompTIA Security+ Certification training covers cryptography concepts and algorithms, PKI certificates, all the way to baseline and network hardening. CompTIA Security+ Certification training also includes wireless networking security for the many vulnerabilities it may present. Physical security, policies and procedures, and often overlooked risk analysis topics will be discussed. CompTIA Security+ Certification training not only gives you the edge when competition arises, but it ensures that you fully understand and know how to react and be proactive to security threats. Take the CompTIA Security+ Certification exam with confidence, work with confidence, and even secure your job with KeyStone’s industry-leading CompTIA Security+ Certification training.
Note: Course outlines are subject to change.
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Interested customers that do not wish to purchase in advance may wait until the product is released and purchase at full retail price. To be notified when a specific product is released, please contact us.
Due to numerous factors, KeyStone is unable to offer a precise release date on any product and any estimates given by sales representatives or web site product pages are subject to change. If a a product is still unavailable 120 days after Pre-Sale purchase, the customer may request a full refund. Once released the Pre-Sale price will no longer be available to any customer. |