Celebrating Fat Tuesday with Moon Rabbit Chef Kevin Tien!
Roald Dahl rewritten to remove offensive language
Karen Sands-O’Connor, Professor of Children’s Literature at Newcastle University, spoke to FRANCE 24’s François Picard about the controversy surrounding the rewriting of Roald Dahl’s work, as the UK editor decides to remove language deemed offensive ab…
Three men arrested, charged in murder of 15-year-old Peachtree City girl
Peachtree City police have named the three suspects as 18-year-old Justus Smith, 18-year-old Jacobean Brown and 18-year-old Yeshua Mathis. All three are from Fayetteville. Investigators believe 15-year-old Madison Gesswein died from a gunshot wound.
WMAL’s Larry O’Connor: Mall in Columbia youth escort policy
WMAL’s Larry O’Connor joined us to talk about the Mall in Columbia beginning a youth escort policy to address disorderly teens.
Russia, China showcase ties as Putin meets Wang
Russia, China showcase ties as Putin meets Wang
Malaita Premier Daniel Suidani Ousted in Solomon Islands
The opposition politician has been removed by a parliamentary vote of no confidence in the Solomon Islands, resulting in protests and further accusations of Chinese interference.
Biden approval rating climbs as Trump sees falling support, poll finds
Poll shows majority of potential GOP primary voters would prefer someone other than Mr Trump as their nominee
Colombia’s ‘Total Peace’ and Climate Change
Never has the Colombian government had as much leverage to negotiate the climate crisis than the present, with the new president and his total peace initiative.
How do Protected Management Frames affect the deauthentication stage of captive portal attacks?
It seems as though if PMF is enabled, deauthentication is essentially impossible without giving a full DoS to the router itself in a more complex way because the router and victim will reject the management frames which are not authenticated.
Is this correct? And if so, is it fair to say that deauthing then using a captive portal is a waste of time?
Additionally, if it’s unknown whether or not the target router and victim’s devices are using PMF, is there any way to verify technologically whether deauthentication packets are having any effect?
Or is there no way to tell the difference between a deauth’ed victim who never connects to the rogue access point and one who was never deauth’ed due to PMF in the first place?
Can I perhaps analyse the packets in some particular way if I can capture a handshake, to see if PMF is enabled?
submitted by /u/PragmaticSalesman
[link] [comments]