Kr00k (also written as KrØØk) is a security vulnerability that allows some WPA2 encrypted WiFi traffic to be decrypted.[1] The vulnerability was originally discovered by security company ESET in 2019 and assigned CVE-2019-15126 on August 17th, 2019.[2] ESET estimates that this vulnerability affects over a billion devices.[3]
CVE identifier(s) | CVE-2019-15126 |
---|---|
Date discovered | 2019 |
Discoverer | ESET |
Affected hardware | Many devices with Broadcom and Cypress Semiconductor Wi-Fi chips including smartphones, tablets and single-board computers |
Website | https://www.eset.com/int/kr00k/ |
Discovery
Kr00k was discovered by ESET Experimental Research and Detection Team, most prominently ESET security researcher Miloš Čermák.[1]
It was named Kr00k by Robert Lipovský and Štefan Svorenčík. It was discovered when trying variations of the KRACK attack.[4]
Initially found in chips made by Broadcom and Cypress, similar vulnerabilities have been found in other implementations, including those by Qualcomm and MediaTek.[5][6]
Patches
The vulnerability is known to be patched in:
- iOS 13.2 and iPadOS 13.2 - October 28th, 2019 [1]
- macOS Catalina 10.15.1, Security Update 2019–001, and Security Update 2019-006 - October 29th, 2019 [1]
Vulnerable devices
During their research, ESET confirmed over a dozen popular devices were vulnerable.[3]
Cisco has found several of their devices to be vulnerable and are working on patches.[7] They are tracking the issue with advisory id cisco-sa-20200226-wi-fi-info-disclosure.[8]
Known vulnerable devices include:
- Amazon Echo 2nd gen
- Amazon Kindle 8th gen
- Apple iPad mini 2
- Apple iPhone 6, 6S, 8, XR
- Apple MacBook Air Retina 13-inch 2018
- Asus wireless routers (RT-AC1200G+, RT-AC68U), but fixed in firmware Version 3.0.0.4.382.5161220 during March 2020
- Google Nexus 5
- Google Nexus 6
- Google Nexus 6P
- Raspberry Pi 3
- Samsung Galaxy S4 (GT-I9505)
- Samsung Galaxy S8
- Xiaomi Redmi 3S