Network Security Fundamentals
BeginnerEvery security career starts with the network, and this beginner course builds that foundation from the ground up — no prior IT background assumed, and no vendor tools required. You start with networking basics: how the OSI and TCP/IP models actually work, what an IP address, DNS lookup, and port really are, and how a packet travels from your laptop to a server across the internet. From there you meet the threat landscape head-on — the real differences between viruses, worms, ransomware, and trojans, how a DDoS attack overwhelms a target, what a man-in-the-middle attack looks like in practice, and why social engineering remains the easiest way into almost any network. With threats understood, you learn the defenses: how firewalls filter traffic, why network segmentation limits the damage of a breach, what intrusion detection and prevention systems actually watch for, the zero trust model reshaping modern security, and the hardening habits that close common gaps before attackers find them. Next comes encryption and VPNs — the difference between symmetric and asymmetric encryption, how TLS and certificates secure a browser session, the VPN types you will encounter at work and at home, and the Wi-Fi security settings every network should have. Finally you learn to watch and respond: reading logs, the basics of SIEM tools, how detection actually happens, the incident response lifecycle, and what recovery looks like after an attack. By the end, you will have the concept-first body of knowledge every security role builds on.
Course content
Certification Exam
Certification Exam
Network Security Fundamentals
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Certification Exam
Network Security Fundamentals
30 Questions
All difficulty levels
45 Minutes
Auto-submits when time expires
70% to Pass
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Tips
See allBaseline Normal Traffic So Abnormal Traffic Actually Stands Out
You can't spot an anomaly if you don't know what normal looks like
Write Your Incident Response Plan Before the Incident Writes It for You
A plan built during a live breach is stress, not strategy
Centralize Your Logs Before the Incident, Not During It
Scattered logs on a dozen different servers might as well not exist
Track Certificate Expiration Dates Before They Track You Down at 3 a.m.
An expired certificate is a self-inflicted outage, not an attack