Social engineering is the practice of obtaining confidential information by manipulation of legitimate users. A social engineer will commonly use the telephone or Internet to trick people into revealing sensitive information or getting them to do something that is against typical policies. By this method, social engineers exploit the natural tendency of a person to trust his or her word, rather than exploiting computer security holes. It is generally agreed upon that “users are the weak link” in security and this principle is what makes social engineering possible.
Perhaps the simplest, but a still effective attack is tricking a user into thinking one is an administrator and requesting a password for various purposes. Users of Internet systems frequently receive messages that request password or credit card information in order to "set up their account" or "reactivate settings" or some other benign operation in what are called phishing attacks. Users of these systems must be warned early and frequently not to divulge sensitive information, passwords or otherwise, to people claiming to be administrators. In reality, administrators of computer systems rarely, if ever, need to know the user's password to perform administrative tasks. However, even this might not be necessary — in a 2003 Infosecurity survey, 90% of office workers gave away their password in exchange for a cheap pen. *
Social engineering also applies to the act of face-to-face manipulation to gain physical access to computer systems.
Training users about security policies and ensuring that they are followed is the primary defense against social engineering.
One of the most infamous social engineers in recent history is Kevin Mitnick.
Enginyeria social (informàtica) | Social Engineering (Sicherheit) | Ingeniería social (seguridad informática) | Ingénierie sociale | Ingegneria sociale | Social engineering (informatica) | ソーシャル・エンジニアリング | Inżynieria społeczna (informatyka) | Engenharia social | Социальная инженерия
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"Social engineering (security)".
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