By Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) is a wireless standard that enables simple connectivity to “secure” wireless APs. The problem with WPS is that its implementation of registrar PINs make it easy to connect to wireless and can facilitate attacks on the very WPA/WPA2 pre-shared keys used to lock down the overall system. WPS is intended for consumer use in home wireless networks. If your wireless environment is like most others, it probably contains consumer-grade wireless APs (routers) that are vulnerable to this attack. The WPS attack is relatively straightforward using an open source tool called.
Reaver works by executing a brute-force attack against the WPS PIN. You can use the commercial version, which comes with a bootable USB thumb drive and wireless adapter to streamline the process. Reaver’s interface is pretty straightforward. Running Reaver is easy.
You simply follow these steps. Load Reaver and click the Play button in the middle of the window. Click the Play button in the attack column next to the AP you want to crack. Let Reaver run and do its thing. It can take anywhere from a few minutes to a few hours, but if successful, Reaver will return the WPA pre-shared key. You can pause and resume the cracking at any time.
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There are mixed results with Reaver depending on the computer you’re running it on and the wireless AP that you’re testing. It’s still a worthy attack you should pursue if you’re looking to find and fix the wireless flaws that matter. It’s rare to come across a security fix as straightforward as this one: Disable WPS. If you need to leave WPS enabled, at least set up MAC address controls on your AP(s). It’s not foolproof, but it’s better than nothing!
In the 4th book of the multi-author Sundering series launched by New York Times best-selling author R.A. Salvatore, Richard Lee Byers introduces Anton Marivaldi—a renowned reaver with an insatiable thirst for bounty and a moral compass that always leads him toward the evil he’s never tried.
Endless, pounding rain afflict the Sea of Fallen Stars and the coastal regions surrounding it. Harvests are failing, travel and trade are disrupted, and civilized forces are giving way to the deluges caused by the storms. In panic and despair, many have turned to the goddess Umberlee, Queen of the Deeps, offering her sacrifices with hope that they will be spared the inevitable reckoning of her perpetual tempest. Evendur Highcastle, undead pirate captain, risen from the depths to assume the mantle of Umberlee’s Chosen, takes advantage of the people's desperation to strike for both spiritual and temporal power in her name. Vying with Highcastle for the hearts and minds of the people is Stedd Whitehorn, a little boy and the chosen of a god thought lost to time: Lathander, the Morninglord.
In a time of such upheaval, Stedd’s message of renewal and hope runs in stark contrast to the savage ethos of Highcastle and his waveservants. When Anton captures the boy in order to collect Highcastle’s considerable bounty, the reaver is quickly caught in the riptide caused by the sundering of worlds.