Masango, Mfundo GMouton, FrancoisAntony, PalesaMangoale, Bokang C2017-10-162017-10-162017-09Masango, M.G., Mouton, F., Antony, P. et al. 2017. Web Defacement and Intrusion Monitoring Tool: WDIMT. 2017 International Conference on Cyberworlds, 20-22 September 2017, University of Chester, Chester, United KingdomDOI 10.1109/CW.2017.55https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Mfundo_Masangohttps://www.researchgate.net/profile/Palesa_Antony/publicationshttp://hdl.handle.net/10204/9666Copyright: 2017 IEEE. Due to copyright restrictions, the attached PDF file only contains the abstract of the full text item. For access to the full text item, kindly consult the publisher's website.Websites have become a form of information distributors; usage of websites has seen a significant rise in the amount of information circulated on the Internet. Some businesses have created websites that display services the business renders or information about that particular product; businesses make use of the Internet to expand business opportunities or advertise the services they render on a global scale. This does not only apply to businesses, other entities such as celebrities, socialites, bloggers and vloggers are using the Internet to expand personal or business opportunities too. These entities make use of websites that are hosted by a web host. The contents of the website is stored on a web server. However, not all websites undergo penetration testing which leads to them being vulnerable. Penetration testing is a costly exercise that most companies or website owners find they cannot afford. With web defacement still one of the most common attacks on websites, these attacks aim at altering the content of the web pages or to make the website inactive. This paper proposes a Web Defacement and Intrusion Monitoring Tool, that could be a possible solution to the rapid identification of altered or deleted web pages. The proposed tool will have web defacement detection capabilities that may be used for intrusion detection too. The proposed solution will also be used to regenerate the original content of a website after the website has been defaced.enCommandsIntrusion detectionSelf-healingWeb-defacementWeb monitoringWeb Defacement and Intrusion Monitoring Tool: WDIMTConference PresentationMasango, M. G., Mouton, F., Antony, P., & Mangoale, B. C. (2017). Web Defacement and Intrusion Monitoring Tool: WDIMT. IEEE. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/9666Masango, Mfundo G, Francois Mouton, Palesa Antony, and Bokang C Mangoale. "Web Defacement and Intrusion Monitoring Tool: WDIMT." (2017): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/9666Masango MG, Mouton F, Antony P, Mangoale BC, Web Defacement and Intrusion Monitoring Tool: WDIMT; IEEE; 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/9666 .TY - Conference Presentation AU - Masango, Mfundo G AU - Mouton, Francois AU - Antony, Palesa AU - Mangoale, Bokang C AB - Websites have become a form of information distributors; usage of websites has seen a significant rise in the amount of information circulated on the Internet. Some businesses have created websites that display services the business renders or information about that particular product; businesses make use of the Internet to expand business opportunities or advertise the services they render on a global scale. This does not only apply to businesses, other entities such as celebrities, socialites, bloggers and vloggers are using the Internet to expand personal or business opportunities too. These entities make use of websites that are hosted by a web host. The contents of the website is stored on a web server. However, not all websites undergo penetration testing which leads to them being vulnerable. Penetration testing is a costly exercise that most companies or website owners find they cannot afford. With web defacement still one of the most common attacks on websites, these attacks aim at altering the content of the web pages or to make the website inactive. This paper proposes a Web Defacement and Intrusion Monitoring Tool, that could be a possible solution to the rapid identification of altered or deleted web pages. The proposed tool will have web defacement detection capabilities that may be used for intrusion detection too. The proposed solution will also be used to regenerate the original content of a website after the website has been defaced. DA - 2017-09 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Commands KW - Intrusion detection KW - Self-healing KW - Web-defacement KW - Web monitoring LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2017 T1 - Web Defacement and Intrusion Monitoring Tool: WDIMT TI - Web Defacement and Intrusion Monitoring Tool: WDIMT UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/9666 ER -