Wireless intrusion prevention system
In computing, a wireless intrusion prevention system (WIPS) is a network device that monitors the radio spectrum for the presence of unauthorized access points (intrusion detection), and can automatically take countermeasures (intrusion prevention).
Purpose
The primary purpose of a WIPS is to prevent unauthorized network access to local area networks and other information assets by wireless devices. These systems are typically implemented as an overlay to an existing Wireless LAN infrastructure, although they may be deployed standalone to enforce no-wireless policies within an organization. Some advanced wireless infrastructure has integrated WIPS capabilities.
Large organizations with many employees are particularly vulnerable to security breaches[1] caused by rogue access points. If an employee (trusted entity) in a location brings in an easily available wireless router, the entire network can be exposed to anyone within range of the signals.
In July 2009, the PCI Security Standards Council published wireless guidelines[2] for PCI DSS recommending the use of WIPS to automate wireless scanning for large organizations.
Intrusion detection
A wireless intrusion detection system (WIDS) monitors the radio spectrum for the presence of unauthorized, rogue access points and the use of wireless attack tools. The system monitors the radio spectrum used by wireless LANs, and immediately alerts a systems administrator whenever a rogue access point is detected. Conventionally it is achieved by comparing the MAC address of the participating wireless devices.
Rogue devices can spoof MAC address of an authorized network device as their own. New research uses fingerprinting approach to weed out devices with spoofed MAC addresses. The idea is to compare the unique signatures exhibited by the signals emitted by each wireless device against the known signatures of pre-authorized, known wireless devices.[3]
Intrusion prevention
In addition to intrusion detection, a WIPS also includes features that prevent against the threat automatically. For automatic prevention, it is required that the WIPS is able to accurately detect and automatically classify a threat.
The following types of threats can be prevented by a good WIPS:
- Rogue access points – WIPS should understand the difference between rogue APs and external (neighbor's) APs
- Mis-configured AP
- Client mis-association
- Unauthorized association
- Man-in-the-middle attack
- Ad hoc networks
- MAC spoofing
- Honeypot / evil twin attack
- Denial-of-service attack
Implementation
WIPS configurations consist of three components:
- Sensors — These devices contain antennas and radios that scan the wireless spectrum for packets and are installed throughout areas to be protected
- Server — The WIPS server centrally analyzes packets captured by sensors
- Console — The console provides the primary user interface into the system for administration and reporting
A simple intrusion detection system can be a single computer, connected to a wireless signal processing device, and antennas placed throughout the facility. For huge organizations, a Multi Network Controller provides central control of multiple WIPS servers, while for SOHO or SMB customers, all the functionality of WIPS is available in single box.
In a WIPS implementation, users first define the operating wireless policies in the WIPS. The WIPS sensors then analyze the traffic in the air and send this information to WIPS server. The WIPS server correlates the information, validates it against the defined policies, and classifies if it is a threat. The administrator of the WIPS is then notified of the threat, or, if a policy has been set accordingly, the WIPS takes automatic protection measures.
WIPS is configured as either a network implementation or a hosted implementation.
Network implementation
In a network WIPS implementation, server, sensors and the console are all placed inside a private network and are not accessible from the Internet.
Sensors communicate with the server over a private network using a private port. Since the server resides on the private network, users can access the console only from within the private network.
A network implementation is suitable for organizations where all locations are within the private network.
Hosted implementation
In a hosted WIPS implementation, sensors are installed inside a private network. However, the server is hosted in secure data center and is accessible on the Internet. Users can access the WIPS console from anywhere on the Internet. A hosted WIPS implementation is as secure as a network implementation because the data flow is encrypted between sensors and server, as well as between server and console. A hosted WIPS implementation requires very little configuration because the sensors are programmed to automatically look for the server on the Internet over a secure TLS connection.
For a large organization with locations that are not a part of a private network, a hosted WIPS implementation simplifies deployment significantly because sensors connect to the Server over the Internet without requiring any special configuration. Additionally, the Console can be accessed securely from anywhere on the Internet.
Hosted WIPS implementations are available in an on-demand, subscription-based software as a service model.[4] Hosted implementations may be appropriate for organizations looking to fulfill the minimum scanning requirements of PCI DSS.
See also
- Wardriving
- Wireless LAN security
- Typhoid adware
References
- ↑ "Fitting the WLAN Security pieces together". pcworld.com. https://www.pcworld.com/article/144647/guide_to_wireless_lan_security.html. Retrieved 2008-10-30.
- ↑ "PCI DSS Wireless Guidelines". https://www.pcisecuritystandards.org/pdfs/PCI_DSS_Wireless_Guidelines.pdf. Retrieved 2009-07-16.
- ↑ "University research aims at more secure Wi-Fi". Archived from the original on September 26, 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20070926220854/http://www.eetimes.com/news/latest/showArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=GPLEDVT0ZRBKUQSNDLPSKH0CJUNN2JVN?articleID=192501255.
- ↑ "Security SaaS hits WLAN community". networkworld.com. http://www.networkworld.com/newsletters/wireless/2008/040708wireless1.html. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless intrusion prevention system.
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