White paper
WPA/WPA2 TKIP Exploit: Tip of the Iceberg
Participating Company:
AirTight Networks Inc.
Participating Analyst:
ETM analyst Both excitement and unease rolled through the wireless security community in November 2008 when news broke that researchers had cracked TKIP at the security convention in Japan [1, 2]. TKIP, an essential encryption component of WPA, which was heralded for years as the replacement for the broken WEP encryption to guard our wireless networks had been poked and sprung a leak for the first time.
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