When I wrote "Secrets of Network Cartography: A Comprehensive Guide to Nmap" two years ago, I made the entire 180 page ebook available online. It's free to read, and it's licensed under Creative Commons. You can copy the entire thing and give it away to anyone for non-commercial use; you just have to provide proper attribution. Like my name. Or my web site. Anything. Work with me, here.
Fyodor has led a great development effort over the last ten years, and part of Nmap's appeal is how such a free and "simple" program can be used to perform powerful port scans, operating system identifications, and application version detections. What started as a simple 10 page tutorial has now grown into multiple ebook editions, free online Nmap webinars, and a for-sale video training series on using Nmap to secure your network.
I'm not surprised that the content and flow of my book was copied, but I'm very disappointed that it was apparently rewritten to hide the copying so that it can allegedly be passed off as original material. The "repurposing" of one of my charts is just one example of the similarities in the flow and tone of my original text. The inclusion of this slighly-used article on an "Ethical Hacker" site has caused my irony meter to melt beyond repair.
To be fair, not all of Kirby "Kev" Tucker's article is "borrowed" from my book; there's at least two paragraphs near the end that aren't associated with any of my original work. I'm not sure where those came from.:)
James "Professor" Messer
Author, Secrets of Network Cartography: A Comprehensive Guide to Nmap
I can't imagine a book on how to use NMAP being more than 50 pages or so...
That's exactly what I thought when I started writing a short tutorial on nmap. 200 pages later(!), it's a comprehensive guide to the operation and inner-workings of nmap.
I've documented, graphically displayed, and captured network traffic for every nmap ping type, scan method, and nmap option. Not every nmap option works exactly the way one might expect, so I've also documented the "gotchas" when using nmap. I also wrote a chapter that outlines some practical uses of nmap for ongoing security needs.
I've released the book with a Creative Commons license, and posted the entire book to the web for free! My goal was to give something back to the security community that could be used to make networks more secure and to help network professionals understand what happens when these scans are active on their network.
Secrets of Network Cartography: A Comprehensive Guide to nmap is available at:
When I wrote "Secrets of Network Cartography: A Comprehensive Guide to Nmap" two years ago, I made the entire 180 page ebook available online. It's free to read, and it's licensed under Creative Commons. You can copy the entire thing and give it away to anyone for non-commercial use; you just have to provide proper attribution. Like my name. Or my web site. Anything. Work with me, here.
:)
Fyodor has led a great development effort over the last ten years, and part of Nmap's appeal is how such a free and "simple" program can be used to perform powerful port scans, operating system identifications, and application version detections. What started as a simple 10 page tutorial has now grown into multiple ebook editions, free online Nmap webinars, and a for-sale video training series on using Nmap to secure your network.
I'm not surprised that the content and flow of my book was copied, but I'm very disappointed that it was apparently rewritten to hide the copying so that it can allegedly be passed off as original material. The "repurposing" of one of my charts is just one example of the similarities in the flow and tone of my original text. The inclusion of this slighly-used article on an "Ethical Hacker" site has caused my irony meter to melt beyond repair.
To be fair, not all of Kirby "Kev" Tucker's article is "borrowed" from my book; there's at least two paragraphs near the end that aren't associated with any of my original work. I'm not sure where those came from.
James "Professor" Messer
Author, Secrets of Network Cartography: A Comprehensive Guide to Nmap
That's exactly what I thought when I started writing a short tutorial on nmap. 200 pages later(!), it's a comprehensive guide to the operation and inner-workings of nmap.
I've documented, graphically displayed, and captured network traffic for every nmap ping type, scan method, and nmap option. Not every nmap option works exactly the way one might expect, so I've also documented the "gotchas" when using nmap. I also wrote a chapter that outlines some practical uses of nmap for ongoing security needs.
I've released the book with a Creative Commons license, and posted the entire book to the web for free! My goal was to give something back to the security community that could be used to make networks more secure and to help network professionals understand what happens when these scans are active on their network.
Secrets of Network Cartography: A Comprehensive Guide to nmap is available at:
http://www.networkuptime.com/nmap/index.shtml
I'm working on the next version now, and I'm open for suggestions and comments. Please let me know what you think!
James Messer