Security Standards White Papers
PARANOIA Security Standard for Wireless Networks
Overview Current wireless security is flawed. There is a distinct lack of authentication and encryption. Currently the Wired Equivalent Privacy protocol can be broken with common programs available via the Internet. Furthermore, many system administrators do not know how to properly protect their wireless networks. This paper offers a technical solution, a proposed IEEE standard PARANOIA. PARANOIA incorporates some existing technologies and others that are in the process of being developed. In addition to explaining the PARANOIA approach, this paper examines competition to PARANOIA as well as other modalities that attempt to solve the problem of wireless security.
| Publisher | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | File Format | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date Published | April 2006 | ||
| Format | White Papers | ||
| Topics | |||
Microsoft FDCC Webcast Series: Do It Right: Log in as Normal User
FDCC requires that the typical user run as Normal User whenever possible; without this, a managed environment is practically impossible. For organizations that have given Local Administrator rights to their...
Gartner Report: Magic Quadrant for Secure Web Gateway, 2007
Interested in what analyst firm Gartner has to say about Blue Coat Secure Web Gateway solutions? Read its "Magic Quadrant for Secure Web Gateway, 2007" report to find out....
Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange -- A Non-Mathematician's Explanation
The Diffie-Hellman algorithm is one of the most common protocols used in networking today. An understanding of its underlying protocols and processes helps a great deal when trouble-shooting a system....
Segregation of Duties in the Real World: Risk-Based SoD Management With Continuous Monitoring Lowers Compliance Costs
Segregation of duties in the real world demands top-down management that eliminates financial risk without adding overhead costs or extinguishing ERP-fueled efficiency gains of the last decade. Fortunately, auditors and...
Encryption Essential to Meet Information Security and Compliance Initiatives
California's unique notice of security breach act (frequently called "S.B. 1386") and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 (also known as "The Financial Services Modernization Act") are two major laws that...



