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Open our terminal (CTRL+ALT+T) and type airmon-ng (view tips and tricks how to create
this command will lists our wireless card that attached with our system.
2. The next step we need to stop our wireless monitor mode by running airmon-ng stop wlan0
3. Now we ready to capture the wireless traffic around us. By running airodump-ng wlan0 our
green box is our victim access point which is my own access point
Information:
BSSID (Basic Service Set Identification): the MAC address of access point
#Data: Number of captured data packets (if WEP, unique IV count), including data broadcast
packets.
#/s: Number of data packets per second measure over the last 10 seconds.
MB: Maximum speed supported by the AP. If MB = 11, it's 802.11b, if MB = 22 it's 802.11b+
CIPHER: The cipher detected. TKIP is typically used with WPA and CCMP is typically used
with WPA2.
ESSID: Shows the wireless network name. The so-called SSID, which can be empty if SSID
hiding is activated.
4. From the step 3 above, we can find access point with encryption algorithm WPA2 and note the
AP channel number. Now we will find out whether target AP has WPS enabled or not.
wash -i wlan0 -c 8 -C -s
if the WPS Locked status is No, then we ready to crack and move to step 5.
Because we already get the information from step 3 above, so my command look like this:
Kali virtualBox, but it depend with our hardware and wireless card.
Conclusions:
1. WPA and WPA2 security implemented without using the Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS)
2. To prevent this attack, just turn off our WPS/QSS feature on our access point. See picture
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