Wi-Fi WPA2 Vulnerability Found 213
Posted
by
kdawson
from the keep-your-enemies-closer dept.
from the keep-your-enemies-closer dept.
BobB-nw sends along news based on yet another press release in advance of the Black Hat conference: a claimed vulnerability in WPA2 Enterprise that leaves traffic open to a malicious insider. "...wireless security researchers say they have uncovered a vulnerability in the WPA2 security protocol, which is the strongest form of Wi-Fi encryption and authentication currently standardized and available. Malicious insiders can exploit the vulnerability, named 'Hole 196' by the researcher who discovered it at wireless security company AirTight Networks. The moniker refers to the page of the IEEE 802.11 Standard (Revision, 2007) on which the vulnerability is buried. Hole 196 lends itself to man-in-the-middle-style exploits, whereby an internal, authorized Wi-Fi user can decrypt, over the air, the private data of others, inject malicious traffic into the network, and compromise other authorized devices using open source software, according to AirTight. 'There's nothing in the standard to upgrade to in order to patch or fix the hole,' says Kaustubh Phanse, AirTight's wireless architect who describes Hole 196 as a 'zero-day vulnerability that creates a window of opportunity' for exploitation." Wi-Fi Net News has some more detail and speculation.
Re:WTF (Score:2, Funny)
You have an awfully low UID for such a huge troll!
Michael Jackson said it best (Score:5, Funny)
I'm asking him to change his ways
Every packet is encrypted just a little
If you wanna make your network a safer place
Find the man in the middle and punch his face."
Re:WTF (Score:1, Funny)
You are the humanity's last hope as time and time again those "incompetent" engineers have failed us. This is how it's going to happen. You will get an EE degree from college. Then move onto graduate school to get a PhD in EE. Then you will become an EE professor. After 20 ~ 30 years of excellent productivity of research, you will become a chairman of IEEE and make sure that the published networking protocols are free of any vulnerabilities. Let me know how far you were able to manage through this process.
Re:WTF (Score:4, Funny)
nah, things went downhill about the 50k mark... ;)
Re:so, not a hole (Score:2, Funny)
Re:WTF (Score:5, Funny)
I'd say more around the 5170-mark, myself.
No need to worry... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:so, not a hole (Score:5, Funny)
Re:so, not a hole (Score:3, Funny)
See that nice dressed business woman? She's stealing your data.
You are wrong, they mention man-in-the-middle-style, not woman-in-the-middle-style.