BugTraq
Denial of Service Vulnerability in IEEE 802.11 Wireless Devices May 15 2004 11:33AM
albatross tim it (1 replies)
Re: Denial of Service Vulnerability in IEEE 802.11 Wireless Devices May 15 2004 06:35PM
Casper Dik (casper holland sun com) (1 replies)
Re[2]: Denial of Service Vulnerability in IEEE 802.11 Wireless Devices May 16 2004 01:27AM
Jason Ostrom (jpo pobox com) (1 replies)


I wasn't there, but I know the Deauth Flood attack [1] is a very effective
attack that most 802.11b networks are vulnerable to. In security
testing, it is trivial to use a Prism2 based card with the HostAP
drivers and flip your wireless NIC into an AP, spoof the BSSID of the AP
station, and flood the wireless clients with deauth frames -
legitimate traffic never passes as a result. Reyk Floeter's Void11 Penetration testing tools
implement this attack [2].

I saw this attack mentioned in at least one book, but I don't know why
it wasn't released as a vulnerability. It is similar to the released
vulnerability, but involves spoofed frames instead of the physical layer.

[1] Aruba Networks "Thwarting DoS Attacks"
http://www.arubanetworks.com/products/whitepapers/secure-wireless/index.
php?pg=3 `
[2] WLSec Projects
http://www.wlsec.net/projects/

Casper Dik> In last year's Usenix security symposium an attack which
Casper Dik> looked very much like one in the first
Casper Dik> paragraph was performed
Casper Dik> agains tthe audience (immediate linkloss was the result of the
Casper Dik> presenter pressing a button on his laptop).

Casper Dik> This was with with plain COTS components, so what is different
Casper Dik> with this attack or is it the same attack rediscovered?
Casper Dik> I don't remember it getting any press.

Casper Dik> Casper

[ reply ]
Re: Denial of Service Vulnerability in IEEE 802.11 Wireless Devices May 17 2004 04:46PM
Niels Bakker (niels-bugtraq bakker net)


 

Privacy Statement
Copyright 2010, SecurityFocus