Researchers Crack WPA Wi-Fi Encryption
narramissic writes "Researchers Erik Tews and Martin Beck 'have just opened the box on a whole new hacker playground, says Dragos Ruiu, organizer of the PacSec conference. At the conference, Tews will show how he was able to partially crack WPA encryption in order to read data being sent from a router to a laptop. To do this, Tews and Beck found a way to break the Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) key, used by WPA, in a relatively short amount of time: 12 to 15 minutes. They have not, however, managed to crack the encryption keys used to secure data that goes from the PC to the router in this particular attack. 'Its just the starting point,' said Ruiu."
Cat5
Is AES not the more secure of the two? From everything I have read, AES is the preffered option over TKIP.
I use WEP!
[FUCK BETA]
Just WPA. WEP was already hideously broken but now WPA should also be considered broken. WPA2 is still safe.
Although, if you really have data you're concerned about keeping safe, you should (a) use a wired network, (b) use IPSEC, or (c) both.
People are never as simple as their stereotypes. This applies equally to Christians, Muslims, and Emacs-lovers.
or is anything worth protecting worth using CAT5 on?
Most banks and government institutions don't use WIFI because of the security vulnerabilities. Granted CAT5 doesn't have have security to access (like wifi tkip/aes key), but it is physically secure, which is at the same level of security as the physical machines themselves.
I find WIFI performance and coverage to be dodgy at best. It's an absolute pain to support.
If I remember reading right, a few years ago, TKIP client encryption was always able to be broken. The catch was that you had to capture the packets with the handshake between the access point and the client. This could be done by breaking the signal and capturing the ensuing reconnect. AES fixed this problem.
I think this may have been if you wanted to actually decrypt the data between the two though and that meant having the WPA key, which these guys have broken. Before this, as the article states, the only thing was a dictionary attack. So, I wonder if you combine the two, can you intercept data and successfully look at it.
import system.cool.Sig;
So, the headlines blare "WPA is cracked!!!!", but the researchers themselves say they haven't cracked the keys used to encrypt the data and all they have is a "starting point".
So, how is WPA cracked and useless, again??
I suppose maybe we'll see at the PacSec conference.
Valid question.
Well, if a story comes from the firehose, it gets tagged "story", because it became a story. And If it didn't, it gets tagged "!story".
Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
I know I just got root access...BTW could you put in some bread? I'm trying to install pop-up's.
-Ours is the wisdom of Solomon, the magic of Merlyn, the fall of Icaris.
Why don't wireless access points just use some well-known and tested public key encryption? What problem is being solved by WEP/WPA/etc which simply broadcasting (or for the paranoid: copying over with a USB key) a regular old public key wouldn't cover?
Why public key? What problem is solved by using public key schemes, with their corresponding complexity, poor performance and large, unwieldy keys?
The question you SHOULD ask is: "Why don't wireless access points just use some well-known and tested symmetric key encryption?"
The answer is: They do. The cipher is called AES and the WiFi security scheme that uses it is called WPA2. What's been broken is the stuff that's still based on the RC4 cipher, which has some well-known flaws.
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They should tagged it "tagged" if it is tagged and "!tagged" if it's not tagged.
"People that quote themselves in their signatures bother me" - athakur999