WPA2
Scientists Intro AirSnitch, Which Bypasses WiFi Isolation to Launch Attacks on Networks
Jeffrey Burt | | AirSnitch, Attacking Wireless Networks, Enterprise Networks, Internet of Things (IoT), MAC address, machine-in-the-middle (MitM), WiFi security, wireless devices, WPA2, WPA3
Scientists from the University of California Riverside uncovered fundamental weaknesses in the client isolation security feature in WiFi networks that can be exploited to bypass the protections and allow threat actors to ...
Security Boulevard
WPA2 Packet Frame Format
Wireless Protected Access, Version 2 (WPA2) is the version of Wi-Fi security used in most cases today. This diagram illustrates the general layout of the security data used by WPA2. There’s a ...
Cracking WPA Pre Shared Keys
Bill McCauley | | Aircrack-ng, password cracking, Penetration Testing, Pyrit, WiFi security, wireless, WPA, WPA2
Cracking WPA Pre Shared Keys This is intended to be part 2 of a previous blog (Intro to Wireless Security), which was designed to introduce people to the realm of wireless security ...
Dangerous KRACKs in Wi-Fi Security Puts Most Devices at Risk
Lucian Constantin | | Infineon, KRACK attack, packet injection, traffic interception, traffic snooping, Wi-Fi, Wireless Security, WPA2
WPA2, the most widely used Wi-Fi security standard, has a number of flaws that could allow hackers to snoop on users’ internet traffic or, worse, to inject malware into it. The vulnerabilities ...
Mythbusters: Is an open (unencrypted) WiFi more dangerous than a WPA2-PSK? Actually, it is not.
IntroductionWhenever security professionals recommend the 5 most important IT security practices to average users, one of the items is usually something like: “Avoid using open Wifi” or “Always use VPN while using ...

