|
|
|
|
|
by benchaney
2630 days ago
|
|
No, because: 1. WPA3, which has only recently been created, is riddled with issues. 2. Many things much older than WPA2 are still used today without major issues e.g. AES and RSA. The idea that standards processes aught to be open is not a ideological debate anymore. At this point it is a simple truth backed by overwhelming empirical evidence. |
|
In regards to 2 I disagree, see tls 1.0 as an example. Also aes isn't a protocol, apples to oranges.