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Rogue APs, Evil Twins, and Deauth Attacks Explained - Network+ N10-009

Rogue APs, Evil Twins, and Deauth Attacks Explained - Network+ N10-009Watch on YouTube

Rogue access points, evil twin attacks, and deauthentication floods are among the most common wireless threats on the Network+ N10-009 exam. This video breaks down how each attack works, why MAC filtering and SSID hiding fail as security controls, and how 802.11w Protected Management Frames and WPA3 stop deauth spoofing. Covers WIDS/WIPS deployment models, RF jamming defense, site survey-based hardening, and real-world examples including the 2024 Australian airport evil twin case. Watch the next video in the playlist to start Domain 5 - the CompTIA troubleshooting methodology.

▶ Watch next: The CompTIA 7-Step Troubleshooting Methodology Explained - Network+ N10-009 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NH3zw9FCcc

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Rogue access points, evil twin attacks, and deauthentication floods are among the most common wireless threats on the Network+ N10-009 exam. This video breaks down how each attack works, why MAC filtering and SSID hiding fail as...

Key Topics

  • The Invisible Threat on Your Network
  • How Rogue APs and Evil Twins Work
  • Deauthentication Attacks and the PMF Defense
  • MAC Filtering and SSID Hiding - Why They Fail
  • Wireless IDS, IPS, and RF Jamming Defense
  • Site Surveys and Hardening Best Practices
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