π― What You'll Learn
- Identify WPA3 and transition-mode networks
- Exploit downgrade to WPA2
- Understand SAE side-channel risks
- Recommend secure deployment
Overview
WPA3 improves on WPA2 with SAE and protected management frames, but it isnβt flawless. This lab explores transition-mode downgrades and known SAE side channels.
Core Topics
- SAE handshake
- Transition-mode downgrade
- Side-channel awareness
- Secure configuration
Prerequisites
A working KaliRange lab environment and comfort with the Linux command line.
Recommended Workflow
- Spin up the target in your KaliRange lab environment and confirm connectivity.
- Enumerate the target thoroughly before touching any exploit β information first.
- Reproduce each technique by hand so you understand why it works, not just the command.
- Capture evidence (commands, output, screenshots) as you go.
- Write a short note on how a defender would detect or prevent what you just did.
Only ever run these techniques against systems you own or have explicit written permission to test. Practise inside your own KaliRange lab.
Your Goal
Work through every task in your own lab, document your findings as you would on a real engagement, then note the defensive takeaways.
Ready to practise. Work through the steps above at your own pace, then move on to a related lab.