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From: Holland, Stephen (Stephen.Holland
NEXTEL.COM)Date: Tue Apr 03 2001 - 12:26:08 CDT
http://computerworld.com/cwi/story/0,1199,NAV47_STO49371,00.html Case
scenario
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/8/17976.html Very Interesting
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2684262,00.html\ Finding
Holes
http://www.isaac.cs.berkeley.edu/isaac/wep-faq.html Different Attacks
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2681947,00.html?chkpt=zdhpnews
01 Weakness in security algorithm
-----Original Message-----
From: Riley, Steven (Security) [mailto:steven.riley
WCOM.CO.UK]
Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2001 4:02 AM
To: VULN-DEV
SECURITYFOCUS.COM
Subject: Re: wireless keyboards
Have you guys got any good references to papers etc that discuss
sniffing/exploiting a Wireless LAN?
Regards,
Steve.
-----Original Message-----
From: Lincoln Yeoh [mailto:lyeoh
POP.JARING.MY]
Sent: 03 April 2001 02:16
To: VULN-DEV
SECURITYFOCUS.COM
Subject: Re: wireless keyboards
At 08:15 PM 02-04-2001 +0200, percival
NS1.DEVNULL.NL wrote:
>Subject: wireless keyboards
>I was wondering, is it possible to sniff keystrokes on wireless keyboards
and such? How do we approach?
As far as I know, it's even possible to sniff keystrokes on normal
keyboards.
But of course wireless is easier (just get a similar set, increase the
gain...).
There's also keystroke insertion to think about :).
Cheerio,
Link.
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