Over the past 18 months, revelations about wireless carriers selling smartphone location data to third parties have forced telecoms to promise reform. Worryingly, but perhaps not surprisingly, these user protections have been slow to actually materialize. Even if carriers shape up, though, an attacker can still track a smartphone's location and snoop on phone calls thanks to newly discovered flaws in 4G and even 5G protocols. . A group of researchers from Purdue University and the University of Iowa will present their findings Tuesday at the Network and Distributed System Security Symposium in San Diego. They note that their discoveries, first reported by TechCrunch , are particularly concerning since the 5G standard was specifically developed to better protect against these types of attacks. The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . A group of researchers from Purdue University and the University of Iowa will present their findings. months, revelations, about, wireless, carriers, selling, smartphone, location. . Brittany Day
Trouble is, with the rise of WLANs has come a whole new breed of security threats. A key research paper released on July 25 by cryptographers Scott Fluhrer of Cisco Systems and Itsik Mantin and Adi Shamir of Israel's Weizmann Institute . . . . Trouble is, with the rise of WLANs has come a whole new breed of security threats. A key research paper released on July 25 by cryptographers Scott Fluhrer of Cisco Systems and Itsik Mantin and Adi Shamir of Israel's Weizmann Institute pointed out critical flaws in wired equivalent privacy (WEP), the primary security protocol for WLANs using the now-dominant 802.11b wireless transmission standard (also known as Wi-Fi). The trio later used their knowledge of this flaw to break the encryption on a WEP-protected network -- in a mere 15 minutes. Then in August, two security consultants released a program dubbed AirSnort for public consumption. AirSnort took Fluhrer, Mantin, and Shamir's theoretical framework and turned it into solid code that most tech-savvy users could operate with little difficulty. In effect, the program points out the holes in WEP security. It could allow anyone with a laptop running Linux to drive or walk around a city and gain unauthorized access to potentially sensitive wireless networks. The link for this article located at BusinessWeek is no longer available. . The expansion of wireless networks introduces fresh vulnerabilities; uncover vital shortcomings in WEP and the risks associated with unpermitted intrusions.. WLAN Security,WEP Risks,Network Access Control,Wireless Security Solutions. . Anthony Pell
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