PrepAway - Latest Free Exam Questions & Answers

What do you think is the reason behind this?

Sandra is conducting a penetration test for XYZ.com. She knows that XYZ.com is using wireless
networking for some of the offices in the building right down the street. Through social engineering
she discovers that they are using 802.11g. Sandra knows that 802.11g uses the same 2.4GHz
frequency range as 802.11b. Using NetStumbler and her 802.11b wireless NIC, Sandra drives
over to the building to map the wireless networks. However, even though she repositions herself
around the building several times, Sandra is not able to detect a single AP.
What do you think is the reason behind this?

PrepAway - Latest Free Exam Questions & Answers

A.
Netstumbler does not work against 802.11g.

B.
You can only pick up 802.11g signals with 802.11a wireless cards.

C.
The access points probably have WEP enabled so they cannot be detected.

D.
The access points probably have disabled broadcasting of the SSID so they cannot be
detected.

E.
802.11g uses OFDM while 802.11b uses DSSS so despite the same frequency and 802.11b
card cannot see an 802.11g signal.

F.
Sandra must be doing something wrong,as there is no reason for her to not see the signals.

15 Comments on “What do you think is the reason behind this?

  1. HackSack says:

    D is the only correct answer here. 802.11g is backward compatible with 802.11b and thus her 802.11b NIC will work just fine picking up 802.11g signals. The ONLY viable answer here is that we are dealing with hidden SSIDs.


Leave a Reply