|
|
|
|
|
by Hizonner
960 days ago
|
|
That's the sort of thing that gets put into specs, is completely ignored by everybody except the handful of companies that pushed to get it into the spec in the first place, and eventually generates enough market pressure than even they start to ignore it. I can understand a desire to kill WPA2 (and I can make some guesses about some maybe less noble motives)... but the WiFi standards can't effectively mandate things the market won't accept. Little trademarked "certified" logos and whatnot end up losing out to "it actually works". Generating pain in the process. |
|