Re: Legality of WEP Cracking

From: crazy frog crazy frog (i.m.crazy.frog@gmail.com)
Date: Fri May 18 2007 - 15:21:47 EDT


interesting but i doubt it will give you good impression? can you
imagine that someone has broken your wep , he comes to you and say
"look what we have broken your wep,now we can offer you our services
to secure your networks"

will you accept his service?don't you think its illegal?
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On 5/19/07, Shenk, Jerry A <jshenk@decommunications.com> wrote:
> I think the specific frequencies that wifi uses are public frequencies
> without "an expectation of privacy". I'm not sure that's a good way to
> pick up customers and I'm not volunteering to be a test case but I think
> there is some validity to that conclusion. Now, what you do with the
> data could become an issue and whether you are breaking the law or not,
> they "offended company" could make your life MISERABLE and cost you TON
> of money. I'd be eager to watch somebody else fight that battle and see
> what happens;)
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: listbounce@securityfocus.com [mailto:listbounce@securityfocus.com]
> On Behalf Of Richard Brinson
> Sent: Friday, May 18, 2007 5:32 AM
> To: pen-test@securityfocus.com
> Subject: Legality of WEP Cracking
>
> During an internal business development meeting yesterday we were
> discussing
> new ways of picking up pen testing clients. One of our junior engineers
> suggested that we go war driving, crack some WEP keys and then approach
> each
> company offering services to make them more secure. The idea was put
> down
> straight away on the basis that without prior approval we would be
> breaking
> the law. However, upon further discussion a case was made that (moral
> issues
> aside) provided we only captured traffic passively, and as long as we
> did
> not try to connect or send any packets to any devices - would the law be
> broken?
>
> Does the law state anywhere that we can not analyse air traffic that is
> broadcast into the public domain? (if so surely we would all be breaking
> the
> law every time we picked up a network other than our own) and is it
> against
> the law to know someone else's WEP key when they have not made that
> information available to you?
>
> What are your thoughts on this?
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Richard Brinson
> Kanoo Ltd
>
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