Wireless Networks in Big Trouble
Published:
21 August 2001 y., Tuesday
Wireless networks are a little less secure today with the public release of "AirSnort," a tool that can surreptitiously grab and analyze data moving across just about every major wireless network.
When enough information has been captured, AirSnort can then piece together the system's master password.
In other words, hackers and/or eavesdroppers using AirSnort can just grab what they want from a company's database wirelessly, out of thin air.
AirSnort's abilities aren't groundbreaking -– security experts know all too well that wireless networks can be easily accessed and monitored by outsiders. But a fully featured tool to facilitate password-grabs wasn't readily available until this past weekend, when AirSnort was released on the Internet.
Wireless networks transmit information over public airwaves, the same medium used by television, radio and cell phones. The networks are supposed to be protected by a built-in security feature, the Wired Equivalent Privacy system (WEP) -- also known as the 802.11b standard -- which encrypts data as it is transmitted.
But WEP/802.11b has proved to be quite crackable. And that's exactly why AirSnort was publicly released, said AirSnort programmers Jeremy Bruestle and Blake Hegerle. They hope that AirSnort will prove once and for all that wireless networks protected only by WEP are not secure.
Šaltinis:
wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
It was reported that yesterday Canadian Sony Ericsson internet store was attacked
more »
Worldwide mobile communication device sales to end users totaled 427.8 million units in the first quarter of 2011, an increase of 19 percent from the first quarter of 2010, according to Gartner, Inc.
more »
At the Computer Human Interaction conference in B.C. this week, a team from Texas A&M University unveiled a touch screen technology they’ve been incubating for a couple of years that isn’t really a screen at all.
more »
A fully autonomous robot, Pneubron 7-11 has been created at the Hosoda Labs in Osaka University. The Pneubron robot was designed to find the link between human interactions and motor development.
more »
The ability to control objects simply by thinking about them is the subject of serious research in laboratories around the world with wheelchairs and even cars now being driven by the power of the mind. It's all very serious science, but in Japan, technologists are demonstrating that mind control can also be a lot of fun.
more »
Microsoft is planning on ramping up the amount of advertising free users of Skype see while they are making video calls and using the rest of the service.
more »
How certain was the U.S. Navy Seal team that it was Osama Bin Laden they shot, killed and buried at sea? According to a Florida company that makes biometric identification equipment, there's no doubt the Seals got their man.
more »
David Braben, the founder of Frontier Developments from Great Britain, has developed a small and very cheap computer "Raspberry Pi".
more »
Online music service Spotify is turning up the heat on Apple as it aims to create an alternative to iTunes.
more »
Kingston Queen's University specialists have developed the world's first prototype of flexible minicomputer.
more »