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Alan
FYI

QUOTE
WPA encryption cracked in one minute
Thu Aug 27, 2009 1:43PM EDT

The second generation of Wi-Fi security systems has now been broken as badly as its notoriously insecure predecessor: Japanese researchers say they can crack WPA (Wi-Fi Protected Access), the successor to the old-school WEP, inside of a minute's time spent eavesdropping on a wireless network.

Details on the mechanics of the attack are set to be announced next month at a computer conference, but it's tentatively described as taking to "a new level" the previous method by which WPA had been roughly compromised, adapting previously theoretical holes in the WPA system and turning them into practical attack techniques.

The previous method of attacking WPA devices took up to 15 minutes to be successful, and didn't always work. The new method is said to work on far more devices and, obviously, much more quickly. However, as with the old attack, the new one only works on WPA devices that use the TKIP (Temporal Key Integrity Protocol) algorithm, which is a setting in your router and device setup.

WPA devices that use the newer AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) algorithm, plus devices that use WPA2 -- the third generation of wireless security standards -- are still safe for now.

However, this does mean that it won't be long before this attack technique trickles out into software that malicious hackers can use to invade WPA networks. With access to your wireless network, a hacker can potentially eavesdrop on any traffic sent, access shared folders on computers attached to the network, and of course send and receive data (like illegal file sharing or even child pornography) which could then be blamed on you.

To protect yourself, upgrade the security settings on your devices to WPA2 if they all support the standard. Alternately, you can upgrade any WPA device from TKIP security to AES. Check in your router administration console and on your computer for and where how to do this.
dboy
thanks, I'll check my network. Don't remember which I'm set on... don't actually USE wifi much except for the wii and PS3, but should secure it anyway since it's still on.
mydeal
Wow. I wouldn't think it would be this hard to make a secure wifi protocol.
TheDiggler
Wow! That's arguably faster than WEP cracking! Thanks Alan for the heads-up. I've been using WPA2 AES for at least a year now. Hope that stays safe a little while longer (as it supposedly uses rolling keys).
cron
Is the cracking based on the use of weak keys? or all keys in one minute?
dasnufus
QUOTE (cron @ 8-28-09, 11:36am) *
Is the cracking based on the use of weak keys? or all keys in one minute?



It's more of a man in the middle attack.


http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/20...sure-on-wpa.ars


QUOTE
The hack is not a complete break; it only results in the ability to read and falsify particular short data packets, but cannot retrieve a WPA encryption key.



The research paper is here

http://jwis2009.nsysu.edu.tw/location/pape...%20on%20WPA.pdf
cron
thanks. I was having trouble with WPA2, so had to switch to WPA/TKIP.

Hopefully it connects the same with AES.
Krunk
Title's sort of misleading as it's only WPA/TKIP that's been cracked. WPA/AES is still secure (for now).
cron
Couldn't get tomato to do client bridge mode in WPA/AES. Ended up moving back to DD-WRT on my router and that worked fine.

I'll be curious to see if this ends up being more of a proof of concept type deal rather than someone doing this in the real world on a regular basis.

Better to be safe than sorry i guess.
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