Exams Vouchers: CompTIA Security+ Voucher Plus Retake Assurance (SECPLUSEXVCHRA)
- Price: Please call
- Code: SECPLUSEXVCHRA
Please call
Description
TopCompTIA Security+ is the premier global certification that establishes the essential skills required for core security functions and a career in IT security. It showcases professionals' capabilities in securing networks, applications, and devices, ensuring data integrity, confidentiality, and availability. CompTIA Security+ focuses on practical, hands-on skills to tackle real-world challenges. As the most widely recognized credential, it is invaluable for advancing in the dynamic field of cybersecurity.
Secure your success with exam retake assurance, designed to give you peace of mind and the flexibility to retake your Security+ (SY0-701) exam if needed. This product ensures you’re prepared for success by covering your initial exam attempt and providing the option to retake it if necessary.
- Exam attempt with assurance: Take your exam confidently, knowing a retake is available.
- 12-month validity: Voucher and retake attempt valid for 12 months from purchase.
- Easy voucher redemption: Redeem and schedule your exam at CompTIA Central.
Further Information
TopA score of 750 out of 900 is required to pass the CompTIA Security+ exam.
CompTIA Security+ certification is valid for three years. Renewal options include earning continuing education units (CEUs), completing the CertMaster CE course, or earning a higher-level CompTIA certification. Discover more about this topic.
Objectives
TopPrior to taking the exam you should be able to:
-
Identify various types of threats, attacks, and vulnerabilities, including malware, social engineering, and application attacks.
-
Utilize security technologies and tools, such as firewalls, intrusion detection systems, and endpoint security, to protect systems.
-
Design secure network architectures, implement secure systems, and apply secure protocols for architecture and design.
-
Manage identity and access concepts, including authentication, authorization, and accounting, to ensure secure access control.
-
Assess and manage risk through risk analysis, mitigation strategies, and business continuity planning.
-
Apply cryptography concepts, including encryption algorithms, public key infrastructure (PKI), and digital signatures, to secure data.
-
Implement compliance and operational security measures, including security policies, procedures, and best practices
Content
Top- Security controls: comparing technical, preventive, managerial, deterrent, operational, detective, physical, corrective, compensating, and directive controls.
- Fundamental concepts: summarizing confidentiality, integrity, and availability (CIA); non-repudiation; authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA); zero trust; and deception/disruption technology.
- Change management: explaining business processes, technical implications, documentation, and version control.
- Cryptographic solutions: using public key infrastructure (PKI), encryption, obfuscation, hashing, digital signatures, and blockchain.
Threats, vulnerabilities, and mitigations (22%)
- Threat actors and motivations: comparing nation-states, unskilled attackers, hacktivists, insider threats, organized crime, shadow IT, and motivations like data exfiltration, espionage, and financial gain.
- Threat vectors and attack surfaces: explaining message-based, unsecure networks, social engineering, file-based, voice call, supply chain, and vulnerable software vectors.
- Vulnerabilities: explaining application, hardware, mobile device, virtualization, operating system (OS)-based, cloud-specific, web-based, and supply chain vulnerabilities.
- Malicious activity: analyzing malware attacks, password attacks, application attacks, physical attacks, network attacks, and cryptographic attacks.
- Mitigation techniques: using segmentation, access control, configuration enforcement, hardening, isolation, and patching.
Security architecture (18%)
- Architecture models: comparing on-premises, cloud, virtualization, Internet of Things (IoT), industrial control systems (ICS), and infrastructure as code (IaC).
- Enterprise infrastructure: applying security principles to infrastructure considerations, control selection, and secure communication/access.
- Data protection: comparing data types, securing methods, general considerations, and classifications.
- Resilience and recovery: explaining high availability, site considerations, testing, power, platform diversity, backups, and continuity of operations
Security operations (28%)
- Computing resources: applying secure baselines, mobile solutions, hardening, wireless security, application security, sandboxing, and monitoring.
- Asset management: explaining acquisition, disposal, assignment, and monitoring/tracking of hardware, software, and data assets.
- Vulnerability management: identifying, analyzing, remediating, validating, and reporting vulnerabilities.
- Alerting and monitoring: explaining monitoring tools and computing resource activities.
- Enterprise security: modifying firewalls, IDS/IPS, DNS filtering, DLP (data loss prevention), NAC (network access control), and EDR/XDR (endpoint/extended detection and response).
- Identity and access management: implementing provisioning, SSO (single sign-on), MFA (multifactor authentication), and privileged access tools.
- Automation and orchestration: explaining automation use cases, scripting benefits, and considerations.
- Incident response: implementing processes, training, testing, root cause analysis, threat hunting, and digital forensics.
- Data sources: using log data and other sources to support investigations.
Security program management and oversight (20%)
- Security governance: summarizing guidelines, policies, standards, procedures, external considerations, monitoring, governance structures, and roles/responsibilities.
- Risk management: explaining risk identification, assessment, analysis, register, tolerance, appetite, strategies, reporting, and business impact analysis (BIA).
- Third-party risk: managing vendor assessment, selection, agreements, monitoring, questionnaires, and rules of engagement.
- Security compliance: summarizing compliance reporting, consequences of non-compliance, monitoring, and privacy.
- Audits and assessments: explaining attestation, internal/external audits, and penetration testing.
- Security awareness: implementing phishing training, anomalous behavior recognition, user guidance, reporting, and monitoring.
Pre-requisites
TopIdeal for tech professionals beginning or advancing in cybersecurity, Security+ is valuable for roles such as security administrator, security specialist, network administrator, systems administrator, and security analyst.
- Recommended experience: CompTIA Network+ and two years of experience working in a security/ systems administrator job role