yaniltma sinyali

listen to the pronunciation of yaniltma sinyali
Türkçe - İngilizce
spoofing
The action of the verb to spoof
present participle of spoof
A method of attacking a computer program, in which the program is modified so as to appear to be working normally when in reality it has been modified with the purpose to circumvent security mechanisms
is when an e-mail message appears to come from a legitimate source but in fact is from an impostor E-mail spoofing can be used for malicious purposes such as trawling for sensitive business data and other industrial espionage activities
A Web site posing as another site to gather confidential or sensitive information, alter data transactions, or present false or misleading data
Impersonating the identity of an individual (such as a storage administrator) or of a device (such as a storage switch) to gain unauthorized access to a storage resource
Impersonating another user to gain e-mail access
Pretending to be somebody else Example: a login screen, an IP address, a terminal, a NIS reply, etc
Pretending to be someone else The deliberate inducement of a user or a resource to take an incorrect action Attempt to gain access to an AIS by pretending to be an authorized user Impersonating, masquerading, and mimicking are forms of spoofing
Illegitimate sites that appear to be published by established organizations Con artists have illegally obtained credit card numbers by setting up professional-looking storefronts that mimic legitimate businesses
Faking the origin; for example, forging mail headers to make it appear that messages originated elsewhere One spoof incident reported by CERT involved messages sent to users, supposedly from local system administrators, requesting them to change their password to the new value provided in the message These messages were not from the administrators, but from intruders trying to steal accounts Web spoofing Academics at Princeton university published a paper describing how easy it is for Web spoofers to produce a 'fake' site that can sit between the user and his or her intended destination Ths spoofers could receive messages and then pass them on to the true destination, and could receive replies and pass them back to the user In this way it would be possible to 'filter' valuable information, possibly without the parties concerned ever knowing that it had occurred
– extremely fast dial up routines used to simulate a constantly open connection on a circuit switched network The speed of establishing the connection makes it appear that the connection was never interrupted
Many network and server operating systems send "keepalive" packets to check the state of connected clients, to ensure that they really are still connected During periods of inactivity this can result in unnecessary calls being made For this reason, ISDN routers are normally configured to spoof these connections, and reply to keepalive packets on behalf of the remote client
Assuming the identity of another as in sending email under someone else's name
Spoofing is the process of replicating the global navigation satellite code in such a way that a receiver calculatesan incorrect position solution
To fool In networking, the term is used to describe a variety of ways in which hardware and software can be fooled IP spoofing, for example, involves trickery that makes a message appear as if it came from an authorized IP address
The deliberate transmission of fake signals to fool a GPS receiver Spoofer must mimic a GPS satellite, rather like a psuedolite but with disruptive intent
A scam used to steal passwords from legitimate accounts by using phony login screens
Impersonating a server or person without permission Pretending to be someone else The deliberate inducement of a user or a resource to take an incorrect action Attempt to gain access to a system by pretending to be an authorized user Impersonating, masquerading, and mimicking are forms of spoofing
yaniltma sinyali