Linkedin Ethical Hacking: Session Hijacking Videos |top| <Trusted × WORKFLOW>
Red teams can simulate this by scraping public video footage (with permission within the scope of the engagement) to test if an organization's "identity verification" processes are vulnerable to deepfake injection.
Using a tool like ExifTool , an ethical hacker might extract: linkedin ethical hacking: session hijacking videos
Session hijacking is a sophisticated cyberattack where an unauthorized party takes over a valid user session. By stealing or predicting a session token, an attacker can bypass traditional security measures like passwords and Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA), effectively impersonating the legitimate user. For cybersecurity professionals, mastering the detection and prevention of these attacks is critical, as a single compromised session can lead to massive data breaches and financial losses. Red teams can simulate this by scraping public
While most red teamers focus on crafting the perfect phishing message, few analyze the metadata and visual information leakage found in the thousands of videos uploaded daily to the platform. In this post, we explore how ethical hackers can analyze LinkedIn videos to simulate session hijacking risks and expose sensitive infrastructure—before the bad actors do. For cybersecurity professionals











