New Attacks on WPA - Move Calmly Toward the Exits
Recently, two announcements were published that detailed successful attacks against the integrity functions of the 802.11 wireless security mechanism known as TKIP (Temporal Key Integrity Protocol). These procedures do not reveal surprises, but instead highlight the known vulnerabilities inherent with the TKIP/Michael protocol since its inception. To be clear, these attacks are not designed to recover the encryption keys or to reveal the private data contained within TKIP protected frames. Instead, they focus on known weaknesses in the Michael integrity check algorithm, which could enable an intruder to insert customized test packets into a LAN from the wireless side in order to probe for traditional wired-side vulnerabilities. In addition, the new attacks could also be used to stage nuisance, denial-of-service attacks against WLANs and could hasten the advent of future exploits on the encryption keys.
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