AirMagnet Awarded Patent

AirMagnet allowed patent for ability to detect counterfeit access points

Dark Reading Staff, Dark Reading

June 26, 2007

1 Min Read
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SUNNYVALE, Calif. -- AirMagnet Inc., the award-winning leader in wireless network assurance solutions, today announced the company has received a notice of allowance for a U.S. Patent covering multiple methods of identifying "spoofed" or counterfeit devices in a wireless LAN.

Developed by AirMagnet's CTO, Chia-Chee Kuan, as well as Chief Architect, Miles Wu, and President and CEO, Dean Au, the patent further strengthens the company's intellectual property and product portfolio (adding to the company's extensive other patents), delivering a vital element for effective security and intrusion detection associated with wireless network assurance.

Device spoofing is a fundamental technique of wireless hackers and attack tools that routinely attempt to spoof the identity of another wireless device in order to infiltrate a network or hide the source of a network attack.

"This is a critical piece of our wireless IDS technology because so many exploits rely on AP spoofing as a prerequisite to an attack," said Chia-Chee Kuan, CTO of AirMagnet. "Hackers will use AP spoofing as the first step for Man-in-the-Middle attacks, some Denial-of-Service attacks, intrusion techniques and even attempts to avoid detection as a Rogue AP. As a result, the techniques covered in this allowed patent application enable us to detect threats to a WLAN immediately from the onset of an attack."

AirMagnet Inc.

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