WPA3 comes to replace the unsafe WPA2

Η Wi-Fi Alliance announcement, which are various manufacturers of devices, such as Apple, the and Qualcomm on Monday announced the next-generation WPA3 wireless network security standard.

The standard will replace WPA2, a security protocol that almost exists decades and is built in to protect almost every of devices today, such as phones, laptops, and Internet of Things (IoT) devices.WPA3

One of the key improvements in WPA3 is aimed at of a common security problem: open Wi-Fi networks. Ta open Wi-Fi networks in coffee shops and airports are very convenient but unencrypted, allowing anyone in the same monitor data sent by other devices.

WPA3 uses a highly customized data encryption that shuffles the connection between each device on the network and the router, ensuring that the traffic data is kept secure and that the sites you are visiting have not been tampered with.

Another basic upgrade to WPA3 comes to protect against brute-force attacks, making it much harder for attackers near your Wi-Fi network to test lists of potential passwords.

The new wireless security protocol will prevent any intruder from having some failed password speculation.

The WPA2, a wireless security standard that runs from 2004, uses a handshake (4-way) to allow new devices that have the password to join a network.

The newer WPA3 will use a new kind of handshake that will not be vulnerable to attacks brute-force that use random password lists.

The new WPA3 security standard is expected to be released later this year.

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Written by giorgos

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