AirDefense Discovers New Version of
"Evil Twin" Attack at Interop 2005
Atlanta, GA- May 10, 2005 - AirDefense, the leader in
anywhere, anytime wireless network security and monitoring today
announced a mutated, malicious version of the "Evil Twin"
attack was discovered last week while monitoring the airwaves
of Interop 2005 in Las Vegas.
This newest Wi-Fi phishing attack is a more sophisticated version
of an "Evil Twin" attack that propagated over the
Internet in January. "Evil Twin," also known as access
point (AP) phishing, is a technique whereby an attacker tricks
victims into connecting to a laptop or PDA by posing as a legitimate
hotspot. Once the user is connected, the user is coerced into
downloading a series of custom written Trojans and viruses.
As an example of this attack, AirDefense identified people
spoofing "free_extreme," the free wireless access
sponsored by Extreme Networks. Once unsuspecting attendees made
a wireless connection, they received a false page with a mouse-activated
web overlay. Any click of the attendees' mouse would trigger
a downloading of viruses, regardless of where the attendees
clicked on the Web page.
Richard Rushing, chief security officer for AirDefense suspects
the custom scripts were launched with a distinct purpose in
mind. "Attackers are most interested in stealing user IDs
and passwords to gain access to corporate networks," said
Rushing.
Similar to email phishing or pharming, AP phishing is the manipulation
of a wireless user. By presenting the user with a familiar scenario
such as a login page to a hotspot, the user will readily provide
his or her user ID and password. The attacker will then have
the ability to exploit vulnerabilities or even add Trojans or
viruses to the laptop, often without the user's knowledge.
AirDefense monitored the wireless traffic at Interop 2005 from
the AirDefense booth, on the show floor, and at a mobile location
inside the convention hall where people congregated at lunch,
and before and after the keynotes. AirDefense tracked an overall
increase in wireless usage from previous Interops, which coincided
with an increase in wireless risks and attacks including:
1,318 stations
were probing for networks that were not represented at the
show
320 cases
of MAC spoofing likely used for malicious activity
172 scanning
devices including Netstumbler and probing stations
63 Denial
of Service attacks
44 authentication
errors
37 brute
force attacks
25 "Evil
Twin" attacks
16 AP phishing
attemps
"Wireless has become pervasive and people were eager to get
online during breaks in the conference," said Rushing. "However,
users continue to neglect securing their devices and do not detect
phishing scams or rogues connecting to them. These under the radar
attacks are similar to the types of attacks occurring regularly
on the enterprise level in government, healthcare, financial services
and many other industries."
AirDefense recommends conference attendees register for hotspot
use on a secure wired connection prior to using wireless. AirDefense
also recommends attendees read all pop up windows in their entirety.
AirDefense has made a free version of AirDefense Personal available
to all wireless users for their laptops. AirDefense Personal will
monitor for a variety of wireless risks, including Wi-Fi phishing
and "Evil Twin" attacks. People can download AirDefense
Personal at http://www.airdefense.net/products/adpersonal/.
About AirDefense,
Inc.
AirDefense is the market leader in anywhere, anytime wireless
security and monitoring. The company's products provide the most
advanced solutions for rogue wireless detection, policy enforcement
and intrusion protection both inside and outside an organization's
four walls. AirDefense's enterprise-class products scale to support
everything from single offices to organizations with hundreds
of locations. Founded in 2001, AirDefense is based in Alpharetta,
GA and services hundreds of government agencies and blue chip
corporations. For more information, please visit http://www.airdefense.net
or call 770.663.8115.
Contact:
Heidi Litner
AirDefense, Inc.
770-663-8115 x:110
hlitner@airdefense.net
Bill Keeler/Liz
Serotte
Schwartz Communications
781 684-0770
airdefense@schwartz-pr.com