The 802.11 standard that underpins Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA, WPA2, and WPA3) and Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) doesn't require that received fragments be cleared from memory after (re)connecting to a network. Under the right circumstances, when another device sends fragmented frames encrypted using WEP, CCMP, or GCMP, this can be abused to inject arbitrary network packets and/or exfiltrate user data.
Metrics
Affected Vendors & Products
References
History
No history.
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Status: PUBLISHED
Assigner: mitre
Published:
Updated: 2024-08-04T15:19:08.804Z
Reserved: 2020-08-21T00:00:00
Link: CVE-2020-24586
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No data.
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Status : Modified
Published: 2021-05-11T20:15:08.537
Modified: 2024-11-21T05:15:03.803
Link: CVE-2020-24586
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