: Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) possesses inherent design flaws that allow attackers to bypass the WPA2 passphrase entirely by cracking a simple 8-digit PIN. Always disable WPS in the router settings.
In the context of wireless network security, a wordlist (or a dictionary) is a text file containing a list of possible passwords or passphrases. These wordlists are often used by attackers to crack the PSK of a WPA-secured network through brute-force attacks. The process involves systematically trying each word or passphrase from the list until the correct PSK is found, thereby gaining unauthorized access to the network. WPA PSK WORDLIST 3 Final -13 GB-.rar
The file represents both the relentless growth of password aggregation and the continued weakness of human-chosen secrets. In 2005, a 10 MB wordlist was considered massive. By 2024, 13 GB is merely “large” — and it still cannot crack properly chosen 20-character random passwords. : Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) possesses inherent design