How this geek spent today during his vacation: Seeing if I could crack my neighbour's WPA2 wireless password and gain access to his network. Very educational - I learned all about 802.1x, EAPOL, etc. It was surprisingly easy with all of the free tools out there now. Knowing what I know now, I could probably crack 50% of people's WPA2 passwords in an hour or so (using some premium cloud compute services, though). The scariest part is - my neighbour had a really good password. Mixed case, 12 chars long, letters & numbers. He's also a senior systems administrator for a very large web-based company, so he knew his security stuff in general.
The problem was it still was based on a dictionary word.
If you care about your wireless security (and you should!), make sure you are using WPA2 (not WEP, which can be cracked in under a minute with the click of a button) and ensure that it's not based on dictionary words. It's only going to get easier to crack as computers become more powerful.
The problem was it still was based on a dictionary word.
If you care about your wireless security (and you should!), make sure you are using WPA2 (not WEP, which can be cracked in under a minute with the click of a button) and ensure that it's not based on dictionary words. It's only going to get easier to crack as computers become more powerful.
Comment