-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I have recently completed a white paper reviewing some of the tactics used in 802.11 wireless LAN discovery applications including NetStumbler, DStumbler and Wellenreiter.
Abstract: Wireless LAN discovery through the use of applications such as NetStumbler, DStumbler, Wellenreiter and others is an increasingly popular technique for network penetration. The discovery of a wireless LAN might be used for seemingly innocuous Internet access, or to be used as a "backdoor" into a network to stage an attack. This paper reviews some of the tactics used in wireless LAN network discovery and attempts to identify some of the fingerprints left by wireless LAN discovery applications, focusing on the MAC and LLC layers. This fingerprint information can then be incorporated into intrusion detection tools capable of analyzing data-link layer traffic. http://home.jwu.edu/jwright/papers/l2-wlan-ids.pdf Please reply with comments off-list and I will post a summary (good or bad, honestly :). - -Joshua Wright Team Leader, Networks and Systems Johnson & Wales University [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://home.jwu.edu/jwright/ pgpkey: http://home.jwu.edu/jwright/pgpkey.htm fingerprint: FDA5 12FC F391 3740 E0AE BDB6 8FE2 FC0A D44B 4A73 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGPfreeware 6.5.8 for non-commercial use <http://www.pgp.com> iQA/AwUBPc+zoI/i/ArUS0pzEQK5+ACgy2m9uA72bGjZlNKo7bw7jmHA+LsAoPxW r1mA8dNgGvD3kZd0Cu3rbmI1 =DUpM -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----