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Annie is a network administrator, and she has just learned that some of the employees are connecting to the wireless access point but are unable to access any internal resources of the company. For example, no access to the internal websites. What does this indicate?
An attacker is sniffing all wireless traffic
An attacker has set up a rogue AP nearby
An attacker has manipulated DNS records in the AP
An attacker is blocking access to internal websites.
An attacker has set up an access point nearby. The employees are connecting to it but since they are not a part of the actual company internal network, they are unable to access the internal resources. In fact, they are a part of the hacker's AP's network EDIT: if it is a company environment, it is probably using WPA2-Enterprise. Attacker cannot create environment with rogue AP, to which employees can authenticate. So I suggest that an answer DNS servers was modified in company AP should be correct. second this Third ThisChanged, rouge AP is a possibility though DNS manipulation makes more sense with this wording.
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