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Wireless security is the protection of wireless networks, devices and data from unwanted access and breaches. It involves a variety of strategies and practices designed to preserve the confidentiality, integrity and availability of wireless networks and their resources. What is Wireless Security?
To protect against those threats, a Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) encryption protocol is recommended. And even though it’s been around since 2004, WPA2 remains the Wi-Fi security standard. WPA2 is a security protocol that secures wireless networks using the advanced encryption standard (AES).
1903 — Wireless Telegraphy — During John Ambrose Fleming’s first public demonstration of Marconi’s “secure” wireless telegraphy technology, Nevil Maskelyne disrupts it by sending insulting Morse code messages discrediting the invention. Records included details like name, email address, and encrypted passwords.
Launched in 2002 and specializing in wireless networking , Aruba Networks’ success led to its acquisition by Hewlett-Packard in 2015. Launched in 1996, Juniper Networks covers the gamut of networking hardware, but with the acquisition of NetScreen Technologies in 2004, the vendor also has almost two decades in the cybersecurity space.
AES-256 encryption for data at rest and TLS v1.2 First released to the open-source community in 2004, founder Alexei Vladishev formally launched Zabbix the year after to develop and extend the solution’s capabilities to an enterprise audience. Auvik Features. Catchpoint Features. LogicMonitor. Progress Features.
X NAC bypasses (2004). 2004 bypass method to set up the transparent bridge. STUNNEL STUNNEL is an open-source software by Michal Trojnara, that provides a TLS encryption wrapper for other services. If [ “${result} -ne “0” ] then # turn up AP Wireless hotspot ifconfig wlan0 down /etc/init.d/dnsmasq dnsmasq stop /etc/init.d/hostapd
Quick history lesson It all began in 2004, with Whoppix , a security operating system based on Knoppix. Longer history lesson Knoppix - Initial two weeks work Whoppix (White-Hat and knOPPIX) came about as the founder, @Muts, was doing an in-person air-gap network penetration test lasting for two weeks in 2004.
2004 saw the first worm designed to infect cell phones in Cabir. It would then attempt to spread via wireless Bluetooth signals. Unlike its predecessors, who would only encrypt files, Petya would replace the computer’s master boot record with a ransom note, effectively rendering the computer unusable until a ransom was paid.
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