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CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition

CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition. Chapter Eight Wireless LAN Security and Vulnerabilities. Objectives. Define information security Explain the basic security protections for IEEE 802.11 WLANs List the vulnerabilities of the IEEE 802.11 standard

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CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition

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  1. CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second Edition Chapter Eight Wireless LAN Security and Vulnerabilities

  2. Objectives • Define information security • Explain the basic security protections for IEEE 802.11 WLANs • List the vulnerabilities of the IEEE 802.11 standard • Describe the types of wireless attacks that can be launched against a wireless network CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  3. Security Principles: What is Information Security? • Information security: Task of guarding digital information • Information must be protective -on the devices that store, manipulate, and transmit the information through products, people, and procedures. • Information that must be protected are CIA • Confidentiality • Only authorized parties can view information • Integrity • Information is correct and unaltered • Availability • Authorized parties must be able to access at all times CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  4. Security Principles: What is Information Security? CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  5. Challenges of Securing Information • Trends influencing increasing difficultly in information security: • Speed of attacks • Sophistication of attacks • Faster detection of weaknesses • Day zero attacks • Distributed attacks • The “many against one” approach • Impossible to stop attack by trying to identify and block source CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  6. Categories of Attackers • Six categories of attackers: • Hackers - Not malicious; expose security flaws, “ethical attackers” • Crackers – Violates system security with malicious intent • Script kiddies- Break into computers to create damage • Spies – Hired to break in and steal information • Employees-Unhappy employees that steal, damage and change information • Cyber-terrorists- Steal, damage and change information for ideology or extreme beliefs CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  7. Security Attackers Profiles CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  8. Security Organizations • Many security organizations exist to provide security information, assistance, and training • Computer Emergency Response Team Coordination Center (CERT/CC) • Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams (FIRST) • InfraGard • Information Systems Security Association (ISSA) • National Security Institute (NSI) • SysAdmin, Audit, Network, Security (SANS) Institute CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  9. Basic IEEE 802.11 Security Protections • Data transmitted by a WLAN could be intercepted and viewed by an attacker • Important that basic wireless security protections be built into WLANs • Three categories of WLAN protections: • Access control • Wired equivalent privacy (WEP) • Authentication • Some protections specified by IEEE, while others left to vendors CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  10. Access Control Security • Intended to guard one of the CIA’s • Availability of information • Wireless access control: Limit user’s access to AP • by Filtering MAC addresses • Media Access Control (MAC) address filtering: Based on a node’s unique MAC address • Can be defeated by Spoofing a MAC address CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  11. MAC address filtering considered to be a basic means of controlling access Requires pre-approved authentication Difficult to provide temporary access for “guest” devices Access Control Filtering CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  12. Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) • Guard the Confidentiality of CIA • Ensure only authorized parties can view it • Used in IEEE 802.11 to encrypt wireless transmissions • “Scrambling • Cryptography: Science of transforming information so that it is secure while being transmitted or stored • scrambles” data • Encryption: Transforming plaintext to ciphertext • Decryption: Transforming ciphertext to plaintext • Cipher: An encryption algorithm • Given a key that is used to encrypt and decrypt messages • Weak keys: Keys that are easily discovered CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  13. WEP Cryptography CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  14. WEP Implementation • IEEE 802.11 cryptography objectives: • Efficient • Exportable • Optional • Reasonably strong • Self-synchronizing • WEP relies on secret key “shared” between a wireless device and the AP • Same key installed on device and AP • A form of Private key cryptography or symmetric encryption CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  15. WEP Symmetric Encryption CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  16. WEP Characteristics • WEP shared secret keys must be at least 40 bits • Most vendors use 104 bits • Options for creating WEP keys: • 40-bit WEP shared secret key (5 ASCII characters or 10 hexadecimal characters) • 104-bit WEP shared secret key (13 ASCII characters or 16 hexadecimal characters) • Passphrase (16 ASCII characters) • APs and wireless devices can store up to four shared secret keys • Default key one of the four stored keys • Default key used for all encryption • Default key can be different for AP and client CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  17. WEP Keys - Key order must be the same for all devices - Default Keys can be different for each device CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  18. Step-1 CRC ( Text) = ICV CRC= Cyclic Redundancy Check ICV = Integrity Check Value IV = Initialization Vector 24-bit changes for each encryption Step-2 IV + Secrete Key =“seed” PRNG = Pseudo-Random Number Step-3 PRNG (seed) = “Keystream” Step-4 (Text+ICV) XOR (Keystream) =Ciphertext Step-5 IV + Ciphertext = Transmission WEP Encryption Process A B XOR 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  19. WEP Stream Cipher • When encrypted frame arrives at destination: • Receiving device separates IV from ciphertext • Combines IV with appropriate secret key • Create a keystream • Keystream used to extract text and ICV • Text run through CRC • Ensure ICVs match and nothing lost in transmission • Generating keystream using the PRNG is based on the RC4 cipher algorithm • Stream Cipher CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  20. Authentication • IEEE 802.11 authentication: Process in which AP accepts or rejects a wireless device • Open system authentication: • Wireless device sends association request frame to AP • Carries info about supported data rates and service set identifier (SSID) • AP compares received SSID with the network SSID • If they match, wireless device authenticated • Shared key authentication: Uses WEP keys • AP sends the wireless device the challenge text • Wireless device encrypts challenge text with its WEP key and returns it to the AP • AP decrypts returned result and compares to original challenge text • If they match, device accepted into network CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  21. Vulnerabilities of IEEE 802.11 Security • IEEE 802.11 standard’s security mechanisms for wireless networks have fallen short of their goal • Vulnerabilities exist in: • Authentication • Address filtering • WEP CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  22. Open System Authentication Vulnerabilities • Inherently weak • Based only on match of SSIDs • SSID beaconed from AP during passive scanning • Easy to discover • Vulnerabilities: • Beaconing SSID is default mode in all APs • Not all APs allow beaconing to be turned off • Or manufacturer recommends against it • SSID initially transmitted in plaintext (unencrypted) • Vulnerabilities -If an attacker cannot capture an initial negotiation process, can force one to occur • SSID can be retrieved from an authenticated device • Many users do not change default SSID • Several wireless tools freely available that allow users with no advanced knowledge of wireless networks to capture SSIDs CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  23. Open System Authentication Vulnerabilities (continued) CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  24. Shared Secret Key Authentication Vulnerabilities • Attackers can view key on an approved wireless device (i.e., steal it), and then use on own wireless devices • Brute force attack: Attacker attempts to create every possible key combination until correct key found • Dictionary attack: Takes each word from a dictionary and encodes it in same way as passphrase • Compare encoded dictionary words against encrypted frame • AP sends challenge text in plaintext • Attacker can capture challenge text and device’s response (encrypted text and IV) • Mathematically derive keystream CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  25. Shared Secret Key Attacks CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  26. Address Filtering Vulnerabilities CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  27. WEP Vulnerabilities • Uses 40 or 104 bit keys • Shorter keys easier to crack • WEP implementation violates cardinal rule of cryptography • Creates detectable pattern for attackers • APs end up repeating IVs • Collision: Two packets derived from same IV • Attacker can use info from collisions to initiate a keystream attack CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  28. WEP XOR Operation CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  29. Capturing packets CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  30. WEP Attacks • PRNG does not create true random number • Pseudorandom • First 256 bytes of the RC4 cipher can be determined by bytes in the key itself CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  31. Other Wireless Attacks: Man-in-the-Middle Attack • Makes it seem that two computers are communicating with each other • Actually sending and receiving data with computer between them • Active or passive CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  32. Other Wireless Attacks: Man-in-the-Middle Attack (continued) Figure 8-16: Wireless man-in-the-middle attack CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  33. Other Wireless Attacks: Denial of Service (DoS) Attack • Standard DoS attack attempts to make a server or other network device unavailable by flooding it with requests • Attacking computers programmed to request, but not respond • Wireless DoS attacks are different: • Jamming: Prevents wireless devices from transmitting • Forcing a device to continually dissociate and re-associate with AP CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  34. Summary • Information security protects the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of information on the devices that store, manipulate, and transmit the information through products, people, and procedures • Significant challenges in keeping wireless networks and devices secure • Six categories of attackers: Hackers, crackers, script kiddies, computer spies, employees, and cyberterrorists CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

  35. Summary (continued) • Three categories of default wireless protection: access control, wired equivalent privacy (WEP), and authentication • Significant security vulnerabilities exist in the IEEE 802.11 security mechanisms • Man-in-the-middle attacks and denial of service attacks (DoS) can be used to attack wireless networks CWNA Guide to Wireless LANs, Second EditionCCRI J. Bernardini

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