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Eccouncil 312-39 Exam - Topic 5 Question 50 Discussion

Actual exam question for Eccouncil's 312-39 exam
Question #: 50
Topic #: 5
[All 312-39 Questions]

John , a SOC analyst, while monitoring and analyzing Apache web server logs, identified an event log matching Regex /(\.|(%|%25)2E)(\.|(%|%25)2E)(\/|(%|%25)2F|\\|(%|%25)5C)/i.

What does this event log indicate?

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Suggested Answer: A

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Ettie
4 months ago
I thought it could be SQL injection too, but I see the point.
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Carmela
4 months ago
100% Directory Traversal, no doubt about it!
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Kelvin
4 months ago
Wait, are we sure it's not XSS? Seems a bit ambiguous.
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Quentin
4 months ago
Agreed, the regex pattern points to path traversal.
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Hubert
5 months ago
That's definitely a Directory Traversal Attack.
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Emiko
5 months ago
I feel like I’ve seen similar questions before, and directory traversal seems to fit best with this regex pattern.
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Malcolm
5 months ago
This regex looks familiar; I think it indicates a directory traversal attack since it’s trying to access parent directories.
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Matt
5 months ago
I'm not entirely sure, but I think it could also be related to XSS attacks? I need to double-check that.
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Lindsey
5 months ago
I remember we discussed regex patterns in class, and this one seems to relate to directory traversal.
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Annmarie
5 months ago
This is a topic I feel pretty confident about. I'll highlight how sea freight is the more sustainable option due to the lower energy requirements and reduced greenhouse gas emissions. I'll also mention how it avoids the noise pollution associated with air travel.
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Portia
5 months ago
This seems like a straightforward question about information security policies. I'll review the options carefully and choose the one that best describes what an InfoSec policy covers.
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Bo
5 months ago
Camera-grade security for data centers? That doesn't sound right at all. I'm pretty sure Meraki MX is focused on branch office and distributed network infrastructure, not data centers. I'll rule that one out.
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Narcisa
5 months ago
I've got this! The Windows 7 edition that requires special licensing and is not available through retail is Windows 7 Enterprise. I remember learning about the different editions in my Windows administration course, and Enterprise is the one designed for larger organizations.
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