// What to read next

What to read after Cyberattaques

Where to go after Cyberattaques, picked from our catalog. The next step up from beginner level, weighted toward the topics this book covers.

  1. 01 · 2023

    Cybercriminalité

    Solange Ghernaouti's structured treatment of cybercrime — how it works, how to prevent it, how to respond — spanning technical, legal and organisational angles.

    Intermediate
    3/5Solange Ghernaouti
  2. 02 · 2005

    Reversing

    The book that taught a generation how software actually looks once you strip away the source. Still the clearest on-ramp to thinking in assembly, even with dated tools.

    Intermediate
    4/5Eldad Eilam
  3. 03 · 2018

    Social Engineering

    Christopher Hadnagy's broad procedural reference on social engineering as a discipline — recon, pretexting, elicitation, microexpressions, and the structured engagement model his consultancy operationalized.

    Intermediate
    4/5Christopher Hadnagy
  4. 04 · 2010

    Understanding Cryptography

    A genuinely teachable intro to modern cryptography that derives the math instead of hand-waving it, covering symmetric and public-key primitives without drowning you in proofs.

    Intermediate
    4/5Christof Paar, Jan Pelzl
  5. 05 · 2010

    Cybercriminalité

    A practitioner's treatment of cybercrime law — offences, procedure, and the application of criminal law to digital crime — by a French magistrate specialised in the field.

    Intermediate
    3/5Myriam Quéméner, Yves Charpenel
  6. 06 · 2017

    American Kingpin

    A propulsive account of how Ross Ulbricht built the Silk Road dark-web drug empire as Dread Pirate Roberts, and how a handful of investigators across rival agencies finally unmasked him.

    Beginner
    5/5Nick Bilton
  7. 07 · 2011

    Kingpin

    Kevin Poulsen's reconstruction of Max Butler's career — from white-hat consultant to running CardersMarket, the carding forum that consolidated the early-2000s underground — and the FBI investigation that finally took him down.

    Beginner
    5/5Kevin Poulsen
  8. 08 · 2023

    Fancy Bear Goes Phishing

    Five famous hacks used as a way into the deeper question of why software is insecure at all, written by a Yale law professor who learned to code to write it. More a history and theory of vulnerability than a how-to.

    Beginner
    4/5Scott J. Shapiro
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