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KisMAC Developer Discontinues Project

mgv writes to let us know that the lead developer of KisMAC, a passive wireless network discovery tool for Mac OS X, is discontinuing the project. Michael Rossberg lives in Germany and that country has recently passed laws that would make his participation dangerous. He urges visitors to take a copy of KisMAC and its source as long as the site is up, so that development might be continued outside the US or EU. From the website: "There has not been a lot of time for KisMAC lately. However the motivation for this drastic step [lies] somewhere different. German laws change and are being adapted for 'better' protection against something politicians obviously do not understand. It will become illegal to develop, use or even posses KisMAC in this banana republic [i.e., Germany]."

3 of 213 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Its a cracking tool by mgv · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Free speech is fine but I don't agree with having this tool available to non-professionals in a nice easily installed package.


    Well, I have used it a bit, and I'm no professional. But having shown people how quickly their encryption fails is a good thing.

    At the end of the day, your comment is one of security through obscurity.

    Kismac doesn't hack the unhackable, it can however open up access points that are much less secure than their owners think, mostly due to failures by the vendors to use proper algorithms. Why this should bother you is unclear to me.

    At the end of the day, the vendors are more likely to change their hardware if this sort of tool is widely available. If it was kept obscure, most hardware vendors would never patch their access points.

    I've used it alot, but never actually hacked into anyone's computer by using it.

    Its likely to be forked anyway and exist on in another country...

    Michael (as the original poster of the article).

    --
    There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
  2. German goverment also sponsors security tools by timbrown · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The irony of the situation is that the German government actively sponsors work on security tools such as GPG, OpenVAS, BOSS.

    --
    Tim Brown
  3. Re:Can he continue 'remotely'? by kju · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First: If he accesses the server from germany, development will not be considered to happen outside of germany. Second: Won't matter anyway, as german law declares itself to be applicable to what a german does even outside of germany.