Hyperactive Security Fed up with network attacks? Well, how about fighting fire with fire? From a legal perspective any action against the system or network of another is classified as cyber-terrorism and is against the law. The government is full of bureaucratic red tape, and to get anything done most often takes a good amount of time. When we are down there at the front line and our company's infrastructure is being hit by an attacker or a lot of attackers our company comes to us. It's us (we and the system we are responsible for) that is on the line. For a moment, let us ignore legal perspective for a while and make fun with the attackers. There has always been a bit of controversy about ethics and morality withing the security industry. The controversy is whether a security engineer is ethically able to retaliate against the attackers she is trying to stop. There are numerous security implications within a wide range of that spectrum between the offensive and defensive. This talk will help cut through the clutter, answering the key questions security engineers really have. Superb coverage of security threats and ways to combat them. The presenter will also discuss the practical guide on the implementation and possible ideas related to hyperactive security concept. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Will be presented on HackInTheBox Security Conference 2005 Bahrain and Syscan 2005 Singapore.