What is Penetration Testing?
Penetration testing, to give it its full title, is where an organization hires experts to attempt to gain access to their systems without permission. In so doing, the experts can identify any flaws in the existing security measures, and offer tailored solutions that can be implemented to prevent any real cybercriminals from exploiting them. There are two kinds, detailed below.
Internal Penetration Testing
The purpose of pen testing is to determine how much access someone has to a system if they do not have any special permissions on the system, but do have access to the organization’s physical premises. It can protect you from practices like industrial espionage, where rivals might try to access your system with an agent on the inside. The penetration tester can begin the test without any system credentials. They can take whatever steps they can in the physical environment to acquire them and grant themselves high-level access to the system sufficient to access sensitive files such as a company’s financials, R&D documentation, or customer payment card information.
External Penetration Testing
These tests exist to model the kind of thing you’d usually imagine when you picture a cyber attack. That means that testers will attempt to access sensitive data remotely, using the standard, limited access you would expect any bystander to have to an organization’s internet environment, i.e., their website or sites. It puts a system’s measures against intrusions, such as firewalls and Intrusion Detection Systems, through their paces and explores how one system interacts with others. There are other distinctions among pen tests, such as between black, grey, and white box testing, which are names for the different levels of information about the target’s infrastructure the tester may begin with and will affect the tactics they employ.