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| Buffer Overflow Attacks:: Detect, Exploit, Prevent | 
| Author: James C. Foster Publisher: SYNGRESS Category: Book
Buy New: $13.98
Avg. Customer Rating:   (6 reviews) Sales Rank: 1789862
Format: Download: Pdf Language: English (Published) Media: Digital Edition: 1 Pages: 512
ASIN: B000FBHNQ8
Publication Date: January 17, 2005 Release Date: April 6, 2006 Availability: Available for download now
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The SANS Institute maintains a list of the "Top 10 Software Vulnerabilities." At the current time, over half of these vulnerabilities are exploitable by Buffer Overflow attacks, making this class of attack one of the most common and most dangerous weapon used by malicious attackers. This is the first book specifically aimed at detecting, exploiting, and preventing the most common and dangerous attacks.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
  Full of errors and inconsistencies July 29, 2008 Does Syngress (the publisher) employ proof readers?
I doubt it. This book is so full of errors and inaccuracies that it becomes painful to read after a while. Especially the annotated examples, where the line numbers for the code listings often bear no relation to the line numbers listed in the accompanying analysis.
And then there's the confusion of ESP and EIP in several places throughout the book. For a collection of 'expert information' it comes off as a rather amateurish production. Makes you wonder... what else have they got wrong?
You'll notice this is very much the same as the review I've posted for "Sockets, Shellcode, Porting & Coding"... that is because it too is horrendous for errors.
This is 2 books from Syngress I've got that are very poor quality. What's going on guys?
  Great book to start with. September 14, 2006 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a great book to start understanding buffer overflows with. You do need some fimiliarity with assembly or you are not going to understand the code that is through out this book, almost every other page.
This gives step by step examples in reading, creating and disassembling shellcode and buffer overflows. I'v read some of the other reviews which suggest their was not much proof reading done it seems like it. I myself found many spelling erros but technical wise I have yet to see any. Maybe my second read I will find some.
  Proofread? Editorial and Technical reveiw?.... March 4, 2006 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
For a book dedicated to such an important topic, my experience with this book was at best disappointing. This goes both for the authors (as they are primarily responsible for the material), as well as the publisher (Syngress). One would doubt whether the book has gone through any meaningful editorial review process. The errata posted on Syngress' site (bad site-design with a great deal of broken URLs in the book's relevant-links page by the way, and one "has to" sign up to obtain the errata) are utterly incomplete. The book at the time of this writing lacks an accompanying website (no reference in the errata or in the book itself).
This is an unfortunate development that one certainly notices in the recent publications pertaining to security topic, perhaps as a result of the urge to push content out to satisfy the hot-market demands.
On the technical front, the choice for the topics seems to be reasonably covering most corners; however, throughout the book there's a focus on pre-SP2 release of Microsoft Windows XP; why? If one of the objectives of the authors was to educate the audience on the topics (by providing practical and working examples), wouldn't such choice defeat the purpose?
  Finally a book on BO attacks March 30, 2005 0 out of 12 found this review helpful
Buffer overflow attacks have been around for over 30 years, finally there is a book on the topic.
this is a valuable title and worth the wait!
  Disturbing February 27, 2005 4 out of 9 found this review helpful
This book upset me. Not really the book itself, that's great, but what it implies: that this type of exploit hasn't gone away. I thought things were getting better, but the author explains that is an illusion: it's just that the reporting slacked off.
It is hard to believe that programmers keep making the same mistakes over and over again. This book shows what those mistakes are and how hackers exploit them. You need a good understanding of assembly language to get much out of this, but if you do have that background, this is a real eye-opener.
Extremely detailed, and some of this is a bit of a reach for me (it's been many a year since I did any C or Assembler), but it is fascinating, though in the same sense that watching a tiger stalk you would be: it's scary.
Certainly recommended for people who are writing code today, and I hope more of them pay attention, though the authors attitude seems to be that these problems will continue to plague us.
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