You've got to hand it to the IT security industry for its ability to coin new and impressive sounding terms for security threats. Hot on the hells of WiPhishing and Evil Twins comes the latest buzz word for wireless Lan security: phlooding. . Phlooding involves a "group of simultaneous but geographically distributed attacks that targets a business's authentication or network log-in structure, with the goal of overloading its central authentication server," according to wireless security firm AirMagnet, which coined the term. The link for this article located at SecurityFocus is no longer available. . Phlouding encompasses a series of coordinated strikes aimed at centralized identity verification systems, interrupting connectivity.. Phlooding Threat, Distributed Network Attacks, Authentication Security. . Brittany Day
Proponents deny wireless networking spec is vulnerable to hijack, authentication attacks. But, A University of Maryland professor and his graduate student have apparently uncovered serious weaknesses in the next-generation Wireless Fidelity security protocol known as 802.1x. In a paper, "An Initial . . . . Proponents deny wireless networking spec is vulnerable to hijack, authentication attacks. But, A University of Maryland professor and his graduate student have apparently uncovered serious weaknesses in the next-generation Wireless Fidelity security protocol known as 802.1x. In a paper, "An Initial Security Analysis of the IEEE 802.1X Standard" funded by the National Institute of Standards, Professor William Arbaugh and his graduate assistant Arunesh Mishra outline two separate scenarios that nullify the benefits of the new standard and leave Wi-Fi networks wide open to attacks. The link for this article located at IDG.NET is no longer available. . Investigations uncover significant flaws in the 802.1x Wi-Fi security framework, questioning assertions of its robustness.. Wi-Fi Security, Wireless Protocol, Authentication Weakness, IEEE 802.1X Analysis, Cyber Threats. . Anthony Pell
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.