A zero-day attack happens when someone uses a secret weakness in something before anyone knows it exists.
Imagine your toy box has a hidden door that only you know about, and you use it to sneak in extra toys without your brother noticing. That’s like a zero-day attack: the attacker finds a secret weakness (the hidden door) in software or hardware, and uses it right away before anyone else knows it's there.
How It Works Over Time
- The secret weakness is already there, like a tiny crack in the toy box you didn’t tell anyone about.
- Someone finds out about the crack, maybe by looking closely at how the toys are arranged.
- Before the people who made the toy box know about the crack, the attacker uses it to get more toys (or cause trouble).
- Only later do the makers find out, and then they fix the crack.
It’s like sneaking in extra toys before your brother even knows there's a secret door!
Examples
- A hacker finds a secret weakness in a video game before the developers know about it and uses it to cheat online.
- Imagine a thief sneaks into your house while you're asleep and takes your valuables without waking you up.
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See also
- How Does Every Password Cracking method Explained in 4 minutes Work?
- How Does Passwords: Brute Force and Dictionary Attacks Work?
- What are decoy networks?
- What is Malware?
- What are side-channel attacks?