7 matches found
Man-in-the-Middle Attack Prevention Guide
Some of the most devastating cyberattacks don’t rely on brute force, but instead succeed through stealth. These quiet intrusions often go unnoticed until long after the attacker has disappeared. Among the most insidious are man-in-the-middle MITM attacks, where criminals exploit weaknesses in...
WiFi-Pineapple-MK7_REST-Client - WiFi Hacking Workflow With WiFi Pineapple Mark VII API
PINEAPPLE MARK VII REST CLIENT The leading rogue access point and WiFi pentest toolkit for close access operations. Passive and active attacks analyze vulnerable and misconfigured devices. https://hak5.org/collections/sale/products/wifi-pineapple Author :: TW-D Version :: 1.3.7 Copyright ::...
NSA Warns Public Networks are Hacker Hotbeds
The U.S. National Security Agency is offering advice to security teams looking for wireless best practices to protect corporate networks and personal devices. The recommendations, while pedestrian in scope, do offer system administrators a solid cheat sheet to share with their work-from-home crow...
CVE-2020-12106
The Web portal of the WiFi module of VPNCrypt M10 2.6.5 allows unauthenticated users to send HTTP POST request to several critical Administrative functions such as, changing credentials of the Administrator account or connect the product to a rogue access point...
CVE-2020-12106
The Web portal of the WiFi module of VPNCrypt M10 2.6.5 allows unauthenticated users to send HTTP POST request to several critical Administrative functions such as, changing credentials of the Administrator account or connect the product to a rogue access point...
SuSE 10 Security Update : NetworkManager (ZYPP Patch Number 7957)
NetworkManager did not pin a certificate's subject to an ESSID. A rogue access point could therefore be used to conduct MITM attacks by using any other valid certificate issued by same CA as used in the original network. CVE-2006-7246 Please note that existing WPA2 Enterprise connections need to ...
IBM to Unveil Secure Open Wireless System at Black Hat
LAS VEGAS–Researchers from IBM’s ISS X-Force plan to unveil a new system for running an open wireless network in a secure mode at the Black Hat conference here this week. The system mimics the way that Web sites browsers use digital certificates to establish a trusted connection with one another...