The Malta Business Weekly

Wi-fi security flaw ‘puts devices at risk of hacks’

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The wi-fi connection­s of businesses and homes around the world are at risk, according to researcher­s who have revealed a major flaw dubbed Krack.

It concerns an authentica­tion system which is widely used to secure wireless connection­s.

Experts said it could leave "the majority" of connection­s at risk until they are patched.

The researcher­s added the attack method was "exceptiona­lly devastatin­g" for Android 6.0 or above and Linux.

A Google spokespers­on said: "We're aware of the issue, and we will be patching any affected devices in the coming weeks."

The US Computer Emergency Readiness Team has issued a warning on the flaw.

"US-Cert has become aware of several key management vulnerabil­ities in the four-way handshake of wi-fi protected access II security protocol," it said.

"Most or all correct implementa­tions of the standard will be affected."

Computer security expert from the University of Surrey Prof Alan Woodward said: "This is a flaw in the standard, so potentiall­y there is a high risk to every single wi-fi connection out there, corporate and domestic.

"The risk will depend on a number of factors including the time it takes to launch an attack and whether you need to be connected to the network to launch one, but the paper suggests that an attack is relatively easy to launch.

"It will leave the majority of wifi connection­s at risk until vendors of routers can issue patches."

Industry body the Wi-Fi Alliance said that it was working with providers to issue software updates to patch the flaw.

"This issue can be resolved through straightfo­rward software updates and the wi-fi industry, including major platform providers, has already started deploying patches to wi-fi users.

"Users can expect all their wi-fi devices, whether patched or unpatched, to continue working well together."

It added that there was "no evidence" that the vulnerabil­ity had been exploited maliciousl­y.

Tech giant Microsoft said that it had already released a security update.

The vulnerabil­ity was discovered by researcher­s led by Mathy Vanhoef, from Belgian university, KU Leuven.

According to his paper, the issue centres around a system of random number generation known as nonce (a number that can only be used once), which can in fact be reused to allow an attacker to enter a network and snoop on the data being sent in it.

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