AirMagnet Wi-Fi security tool takes aim at drones

  • 22 July 2014
  • 0 replies
  • 247 views

Userlevel 6
by Stephen Lawson  July 21, 2014
 
In its quest to help enterprises seek out and neutralize all threats to their Wi-Fi networks, AirMagnet is now looking to the skies.
In a free software update to its AirMagnet Enterprise product last week, the Wi-Fi security division of Fluke Networks added code specifically crafted to detect the Parrot AR Drone,  a popular unmanned aerial vehicle that costs a few hundred dollars and can be controlled using a smartphone or tablet.
 
Drones themselves don't pose any special threat to Wi-Fi networks, and AirMagnet isn't issuing air pistols to its customers to shoot them down. The reason the craft are dangerous is that they can be modified to act as rogue APs (access points) and sent into range of a victim's wireless network, potentially breaking into a network to steal data, according to Greg Rayburn, a security analyst at AirMagnet.
 
"These things are really just flying access points," Rayburn said. If a network isn't protected, a rogue access point can be used to break into it and steal any type of data that's going over the airwaves.
 
 
Full story

0 replies

Be the first to reply!

Reply