republican-creole
site Search:


 
    All Forums Hot Topics Gallery






how-to block ads


 
Search Topic:
Uniqs:
353
Share Topic
Post a:
Post a:
AuthorAll Replies


Raptor
Not a Dumptruck

join:2001-10-21
London, ON

Bad Business Model?

I can't see the ISP's being entirely diligent on this one as it would cost them customers in the end. I don't see this working. The government let alone the ISP's aren't competent enough to reliably enforce such a measure even if they wanted to do so, privacy issues aside.

Now I'm curious as to the feedback, if any, that will come from the EU. I'm not that familiar with how much influence the EU has though in regards to such an issue.
--
....where's my fiber?


S_engineer
Premium
join:2007-05-16
Chicago, IL

this may further fracture alliances within the EU, as it should. I think if they pause and peer into their own financial messes, they may realize that they bigger fish to fry!



BIGMIKE
Premium
join:2002-06-07
Westminster, CA

reply to Raptor
Cracking a wireless network in 3 minutes

»hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl···from=rss

Turbo-charged wireless hacks threaten networks

The latest graphics cards have been used to break Wi-Fi encryption far quicker than was previously possible. Some security consultants are already suggesting the development blows Wi-Fi security out of the water and that corporations ought to apply tighter VPN controls, or abandon wireless networks altogether, in response.
»www.theregister.co.uk/2008/10/10···hacking/


Gogo1

join:2004-05-27
Brooklyn, NY

said by BIGMIKE:

The latest graphics cards have been used to break Wi-Fi encryption far quicker than was previously possible. Some security consultants are already suggesting the development blows Wi-Fi security out of the water and that corporations ought to apply tighter VPN controls, or abandon wireless networks altogether, in response.
»www.theregister.co.uk/2008/10/10···hacking/
So are appropriately chosen passwords still safe for WPA2 if it is brute force? It sounds like it. For now.
Whats a suitable password? Just something very long and using caps, numbers, special characters etc?
Although what those guys are suggesting is that its just a matter of time before any WPA2 password can be brute forced, is that correct?

Friday, 01-Jun 08:24:49 Terms of Use & Privacy | feedback | contact | Hosting by nac.net - DSL,Hosting & Co-lo
over 12.5 years online © 1999-2012 dslreports.com.
Most commented news this week
Hot Topics