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Kali Linux Wireless Penetration Testing Beginner???s Guide - Third Edition

You're reading from  Kali Linux Wireless Penetration Testing Beginner???s Guide - Third Edition

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788831925
Pages 210 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Authors (3):
Cameron Buchanan Cameron Buchanan
Profile icon Cameron Buchanan
Daniel W. Dieterle Daniel W. Dieterle
Profile icon Daniel W. Dieterle
Vivek Ramachandran Vivek Ramachandran
Profile icon Vivek Ramachandran
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters close

Kali Linux Wireless Penetration Testing Beginner's Guide Third Edition
Credits
Disclaimer
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
1. Wireless Lab Setup 2. WLAN and Its Inherent Insecurities 3. Bypassing WLAN Authentication 4. WLAN Encryption Flaws 5. Attacks on the WLAN Infrastructure 6. Attacking the Client 7. Advanced WLAN Attacks 8. KRACK Attacks 9. Attacking WPA-Enterprise and RADIUS 10. WLAN Penetration Testing Methodology 11. WPS and Probes Pop Quiz Answers Index

WPS attacks


Wireless Protected Setup (WPS) was introduced in 2006 to help users without wireless knowledge to have secure networks. The idea was that their Wi-Fi device would have a single hidden hardcoded value that would allow access with key memorization. New devices would be authenticated through a button press on the Wi-Fi router. Individuals outside the house without access to the device would not be able to have access, thus reducing the issues surrounding remembering WPA keys or setting short ones.

In late 2011, a security vulnerability was disclosed enabling brute-force attacks on the WPS authentication system. The traffic required to negotiate a WPS exchange was spoofable, and the WPS pin itself is only eight characters between 0-9. To start with, this provides only 100,000,000 possibilities in comparison with an eight-character azAZ09 password having 218,340,105,584,896 combinations.

However, there are further vulnerabilities:

  • Of the eight characters of the WPS pin, the last character...

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