Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
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Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
https://fossbytes.com/wpa-2-vulnerabili ... sdropping/
This, if actually used is a world of hurt on 99% of all Wi-Fi. Yes companies like MS have already patched it, but this still doesn't mean that it's easy to resolve. Mac systems are easy targets as well as Androids... Androids more so.
If you can, hard wire in, if you can't, start looking at beefing up your security measures.
This, if actually used is a world of hurt on 99% of all Wi-Fi. Yes companies like MS have already patched it, but this still doesn't mean that it's easy to resolve. Mac systems are easy targets as well as Androids... Androids more so.
If you can, hard wire in, if you can't, start looking at beefing up your security measures.
#NotOneRedCent
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Re: Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
Yeah, not so much...
#NotOneRedCent
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Re: Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
Saw this yesterday, was waiting to see the response from tech companies. So far, it's being buried (they don't have an answer).The Conservative wrote:https://fossbytes.com/wpa-2-vulnerabili ... sdropping/
This, if actually used is a world of hurt on 99% of all Wi-Fi. Yes companies like MS have already patched it, but this still doesn't mean that it's easy to resolve. Mac systems are easy targets as well as Androids... Androids more so.
If you can, hard wire in, if you can't, start looking at beefing up your security measures.
It's not a Microsoft/Android/Apple issue. It has to do with the actual routing protocols in Wi-Fi. This falls on Cisco, and the IEEE, most likely. There's nothing for Microsoft to do at the OS level, they can't force a rotating key at the network level, if the other end isn't using the same method.
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Re: Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
Yes, but companies such as Apple and MS can protect their OS's while this is being resolved on a firmware level.GrumpyCatFace wrote:Saw this yesterday, was waiting to see the response from tech companies. So far, it's being buried (they don't have an answer).The Conservative wrote:https://fossbytes.com/wpa-2-vulnerabili ... sdropping/
This, if actually used is a world of hurt on 99% of all Wi-Fi. Yes companies like MS have already patched it, but this still doesn't mean that it's easy to resolve. Mac systems are easy targets as well as Androids... Androids more so.
If you can, hard wire in, if you can't, start looking at beefing up your security measures.
It's not a Microsoft/Android/Apple issue. It has to do with the actual routing protocols in Wi-Fi. This falls on Cisco, and the IEEE, most likely. There's nothing for Microsoft to do at the OS level, they can't force a rotating key at the network level, if the other end isn't using the same method.
#NotOneRedCent
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Re: Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
How would you propose they do that? OS is told to connect to a network, connects, receives data. Other than the standard virus detection, there's nothing to be done on the network layer. The information being sent/received can still be intercepted, regardless. The OS would never see it.The Conservative wrote:Yes, but companies such as Apple and MS can protect their OS's while this is being resolved on a firmware level.GrumpyCatFace wrote:Saw this yesterday, was waiting to see the response from tech companies. So far, it's being buried (they don't have an answer).The Conservative wrote:https://fossbytes.com/wpa-2-vulnerabili ... sdropping/
This, if actually used is a world of hurt on 99% of all Wi-Fi. Yes companies like MS have already patched it, but this still doesn't mean that it's easy to resolve. Mac systems are easy targets as well as Androids... Androids more so.
If you can, hard wire in, if you can't, start looking at beefing up your security measures.
It's not a Microsoft/Android/Apple issue. It has to do with the actual routing protocols in Wi-Fi. This falls on Cisco, and the IEEE, most likely. There's nothing for Microsoft to do at the OS level - they can't force a rotating key at the network level, if the other end isn't using the same method.
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Re: Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
We need to overhaul the entire protocol.
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Re: Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
That's the bizarre part of this. The researchers already have a solution - using rotating keys. It's so common sense, that I suspect there's a reason it wasn't done in the first place. They might have stumbled across one of the IC backdoors..in which case, this will get interesting quickly.Speaker to Animals wrote:We need to overhaul the entire protocol.
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Re: Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
We need to overhaui the internet and security as a whole, this isn't just a single "patch fix"... the problem is that people are not going to want to do what needs to be done.Speaker to Animals wrote:We need to overhaul the entire protocol.
#NotOneRedCent
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Re: Severe WiFi Hack: WPA2 “KRACK Attack” Threatens WiFi Users Around The World
GrumpyCatFace wrote:That's the bizarre part of this. The researchers already have a solution - using rotating keys. It's so common sense, that I suspect there's a reason it wasn't done in the first place. They might have stumbled across one of the IC backdoors..in which case, this will get interesting quickly.Speaker to Animals wrote:We need to overhaul the entire protocol.
You are close to the truth.
Hint: take the word security out of NSA and replace it with the word vulnerability.