Los Angeles Times

Flaw in Wi-Fi puts data at risk

Any device using the networks is probably susceptibl­e to hacks, a researcher says.

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha.masunaga@latimes.com Twitter: @smasunaga

Any device using the corporate and home networks may be leaving informatio­n susceptibl­e to hacks, a researcher says.

Home and corporate WiFi networks — and all the data, photos and messages transmitte­d across them — could be vulnerable to hackers, according to a computer security researcher in Belgium.

The vulnerabil­ity is in WPA2, the main protocol that protects Wi-Fi networks. Hackers can use a technique known as key reinstalla­tion attacks, or Krack for short, to intercept informatio­n sent over networks that users thought were encrypted, the researcher says.

“Nobody has ever found this vulnerabil­ity,” said Matthew Green, assistant professor of computer science at Johns Hopkins University. “It’s pretty serious.” Who does this affect?

WPA2 is the “industry standard” and has been heavily relied upon as the “best level of protection for your informatio­n,” said Emma Garrison-Alexander, vice dean for cybersecur­ity and informatio­n assurance in the graduate school at the University of Maryland University College.

“It’s really the fundamenta­l way our wireless communicat­ion is protected today,” she said.

Mathy Vanhoef, the researcher who discovered the protocol vulnerabil­ity, said on his website that any device that uses Wi-Fi is probably vulnerable. That means a router, a phone, a laptop, a smart TV or even a Wi-Fi-enabled refrigerat­or that uses WPA2 protocol could be susceptibl­e.

Vanhoef said that the attack works against all modern protected Wi-Fi networks and that his team found during its research that systems powered by Android, Apple, Windows, Linux and others were all affected by “some variant” of the attacks.

Are some operating systems more susceptibl­e than others?

Vanhoef said on his site that the key reinstalla­tion attack was “exceptiona­lly devastatin­g” against Linux and Android 6.0 or higher.

What’s the worst-case scenario?

A hacker could exploit this vulnerabil­ity in a Wi-Fi network and use it to capture the content of victims’ emails, browsing data to see what websites they visit, credit card informatio­n from online purchases, or photos and videos sent to friends.

“Any data informatio­n sharing that’s depending on that protocol for security” could be exposed, Garrison-Alexander said.

Should I be freaking out? Yes and no. Though the security implicatio­ns are grave, researcher­s believe attackers must be physically proximate to their victims, and extremely skilled in hacking. That makes attacks against individual­s less likely, at least for now, than attacks against corporate targets, which transmit large amounts of payment informatio­n, experts said.

What should users do to protect themselves?

Cybersecur­ity researcher­s advise that users download a patch, or fix, from their device and router manufactur­ers as soon as they are available.

Microsoft Corp. said in a statement that the company released security updates last week and that users who have Windows Updates enabled and applied the security updates are automatica­lly protected.

An Apple spokesman confirmed that the fix for the vulnerabil­ity is already patched into some devices that run beta versions of all of the company’s operating systems, including Mac OS, iOS, Watch and TV. A software update will be coming in a few weeks to patch the rest.

Google said in a statement that it is aware of the issue and will be patching any affected devices in the coming weeks. The company said Android partners have also been notified and will be issuing patches “as quickly as possible.”

Websites protected by HTTPS and encrypted email features could offer users an additional layer of protection, said Avi Rubin, professor of computer science at Johns Hopkins University and technical director of the university’s informatio­n security institute.

Concerned users could also avoid password-less file-sharing and avoid performing sensitive transactio­ns on devices that connect to many Wi-Fi networks or have many unencrypte­d apps.

 ?? Phive2015 Getty Images ?? CONCERNED Wi-Fi users could avoid performing sensitive transactio­ns on devices that connect to many Wi-Fi networks.
Phive2015 Getty Images CONCERNED Wi-Fi users could avoid performing sensitive transactio­ns on devices that connect to many Wi-Fi networks.

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