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WS
2004
ACM

Analysis of the 802.11i 4-way handshake

13 years 10 months ago
Analysis of the 802.11i 4-way handshake
802.11i is an IEEE standard designed to provide enhanced MAC security in wireless networks. The authentication process involves three entities: the supplicant (wireless device), the authenticator (access point), and the authentication server (e.g., a backend RADIUS server). A 4-Way Handshake must be executed between the supplicant and the authenticator to derive a fresh pairwise key and/or group key for subsequent data transmissions. We analyze the 4-Way Handshake protocol using a finite-state verification tool and find a Denial-of-Service attack. The attack involves forging initial messages from the authenticator to the supplicant to produce inconsistent keys in peers. Three repairs are proposed; based on various considerations, the third one appears to be the best. The resulting improvement to the standard, adopted by the 802.11 TGi in their final deliberation, involves only a minor change in the algorithm used by the supplicant. Categories and Subject Descriptors C.2.2 [Computer-Co...
Changhua He, John C. Mitchell
Added 30 Jun 2010
Updated 30 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where WS
Authors Changhua He, John C. Mitchell
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