Researchers able to predict iOS-generated hotspot passwords in less than a minute

Anyone who’s tried to tether to their iPhone or iPad will recall how iOS manages to craft its own passwords when used as a personal hotspot. The aim is to ensure that anyone sharing a data connection will get some degree of security, regardless of whether or not they tinker with the password themselves. However, three researchers from FAU in Germany have now worked the structure behind these auto-generated keys — a combination of a short English word and a series or random numbers — and managed to crack that hotspot protection in under a minute. To start, the word list contains about 52,500 entries, and once the testers were able to capture a WiFi connection, they used an AMD Radeon HD 6990 GPU to cycle through all those words with number codes, taking just under 50 minutes to crack with rote entry. Following that, they realized that only a small subset (just 1,842) of the word list was being used.

With an even faster GPU — a cluster of four AMD Radeon HD 7970s — they got the hotspot password cracking time to 50 seconds. The Friedrich-Alexander University researchers added that unscrupulous types could use comparable processing power through cloud computing. “System-generated passwords should be reasonably long, and should use a reasonably large character set. Consequently, hotspot passwords should be composed of completely random sequences of letters, numbers, and special characters,” says the report, which outlines the trade-off between security and usability. However, as ZDNet notes, Apple’s cycled password approach still offers more protection than static options found elsewhere. Check out the full paper at the source.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Via: ZDNet

Source: Department of Computer Science, Friedrich-Alexander University (PDF)

AT&T’s new MiFi Liberate is LTE-capable, ‘world’s first’ with touchscreen display

AT&T's new MiFi Liberate is LTEcapable, 'world's first' with touchscreen display

We’ll have to give it to AT&T for going with something a wee bit different than what we’re accustomed to seeing in the world of handy MiFis — but with touchscreens apparently being a thing nowadays, it also shouldn’t surprise us that the company chose to go this route. Either way, the newly introduced MiFi Liberate will surely be of help to those who need to stay connected while on the go, offering features such as LTE connectivity (provided the network’s live in the area, of course), simultaneous pairing of up to 10 WiFi devices, 11-hour battery life, a microSD slot, DLNA capabilities and, as you can see above, a 2.8-inch touchscreen display. Unfortunately, the carrier didn’t say when we can expect the Liberate to be up for grabs (or for how much), with a company representative only telling us that it’ll be at some point “in the coming months.” While we wait for those details, however, feel free to check out the extra pic located just past the break.

Continue reading AT&T’s new MiFi Liberate is LTE-capable, ‘world’s first’ with touchscreen display

Filed under: , ,

AT&T’s new MiFi Liberate is LTE-capable, ‘world’s first’ with touchscreen display originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Sep 2012 14:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAT&T  | Email this | Comments