Wireless Security Attacks and Defenses
An anonymous reader writes "IT-Observer is running a comprehensive overview of wireless attacks and defenses. From the article: 'Wireless technology can provide numerous benefits in the business world. By deploying wireless networks, customers, partners, and employees are given the freedom of mobility from within and from outside of the organization. This can help businesses to increase productivity and effectiveness, lower costs and increase scalability, improve relationships with business partners, and attract new customers.'"
Article didn't seem to have the pictures and diagrams that the text referred to. http://www.windowsecurity.com/whitepapers/Wireless -Security-Attacks-Defenses.html is a version of the article with those pictures
Three guys named Brad and another one named Josh post a fluffy little article on security for wireless, then cover about 1/3rd of the basics, and none of the tough stuff.
In a word, they should be punished. And someone should tape their eyes open while reading WiFoo or another good book on just how many zillion interesting hacks there are for wireless. And then, the site should get the check back-- if they were so silly as to have paid these guys.
And I wonder, how many more airy and light posts will there be, today? Slashdot Lite, less filling, less intelligent-- news for birds.
---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
Look at page 3. It's the one where they tell you what you should do to secure your network.
Bullshit. Everything you need to do this can be found on a single Linux LiveCD (Auditor Linux) including the kit for doing replay attacks. Only unmotivated "hackers" will fail to crack WEP.
Score: 0/1
Bullshit. Again, this will only get people who are unmotivated. MAC spoofing is a triviality. It typically will stop drive-by users of wifi, because they can usually find one that has no "protection" and they can use that. MAC restriction will NOT stop anyone who wants onto your network for any reason other than a minor whim.
Score: 0/2
Using a halfway decent scanner makes ANY settings changes you do (besides turning on WPA) utterly useless.
Score: 0/3
Again, a good scanner makes this irrelevant.
Score: 0/4
Uh, this is the same thing as "mac address blocking". They're the SAME FEATURE, just one is default accept, and the other is default deny.
Score: 0/5 (I should really assign a negative point for trying to use the same feature as a bullet point twice, but I'll be nice.)
If someone has physical access to your AP, you're fucked anyway. If they can do remote admin in your AP, you're an idiot anyway - and turning off remote admin isn't even listed as a good idea here.
Score: 0/6
No, it isn't. A few moments of sniffing will tell you what you need to know. Utterly useless and it just makes your life harder.
Score: 0/7
This article tells you nothing about how to effectively secure your network. In fact, it tells you to do a whole bunch of things that won't work.
Want to secure wifi? There is only one means to do so, and that is to use a tunnel with strong encryption. Whether you're using com
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
The May 10th, 2006 date on this article must be wrong. The article is obviously months or years old. The lack of information about WPA, the discussion of warchalking and the dates of the referenced material all indicate this article was written sometime in early 2005 or late 2004. It was posted on invulnerableit in 11/2005, but I suspect it is older than that.