From the course: ISC2 Systems Security Certified Practitioner (SSCP) (2024) Cert Prep
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Preventing rogues and evil twins
From the course: ISC2 Systems Security Certified Practitioner (SSCP) (2024) Cert Prep
Preventing rogues and evil twins
- [Instructor] Rogue access points occur when someone connects an unauthorized wireless access point to an enterprise network. This might be as simple as an employee with bad wireless connectivity in their office, purchasing an access point, and plugging it into a network jack to gain a better signal. Or it could be more sinister, with a hacker connecting an access point to later gain room remote access to the network. The huge risk with rogue access points is that they can bypass other wireless authentication mechanisms. If you spend hours configuring your systems to use WPA-3 security, a rogue access point configure to avoid encryption can quickly bypass all of that. Anyone connecting to the rogue AP can then gain an unrestricted access to your network. A second risk posed by rogue access points is interference. There are a limited number of wifi channels available and rogue APS can quickly interfere…
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- (Locked) Denial of service attacks4m 20s
- (Locked) Eavesdropping attacks4m 12s
- (Locked) DNS attacks3m 39s
- (Locked) Layer 2 attacks2m 5s
- (Locked) Network address spoofing3m 40s
- (Locked) Wireless attacks3m 3s
- (Locked) Propagation attacks4m 22s
- (Locked) Preventing rogues and evil twins2m 52s
- (Locked) Disassociation attacks2m 11s
- (Locked) Understanding Bluetooth and NFC attacks2m 4s
- (Locked)
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