In today's world, Packet injection is a highly relevant topic that has captured the attention of academics, professionals and the general public. Since its inception, Packet injection has played a crucial role in society, generating debates, controversies and significant changes in different areas. Throughout history, Packet injection has evolved and adapted to the transformations of the modern world, influencing the way people interact, think and act. In this article, we will explore various aspects related to Packet injection, analyzing its impact today and reflecting on its importance in the future.
Packet injection (also known as forging packets or spoofing packets) in computer networking, is the process of interfering with an established network connection by means of constructing packets to appear as if they are part of the normal communication stream. The packet injection process allows an unknown third party to disrupt or intercept packets from the consenting parties that are communicating, which can lead to degradation or blockage of users' ability to utilize certain network services or protocols. Packet injection is commonly used in man-in-the-middle attacks and denial-of-service attacks.
By utilizing raw sockets, NDIS function calls, or direct access to a network adapter kernel mode driver, arbitrary packets can be constructed and injected into a computer network. These arbitrary packets can be constructed from any type of packet protocol (ICMP, TCP, UDP, and others) since there is full control over the packet header while the packet is being assembled.
Packet injection has been used for:
Through the process of running a packet analyzer or packet sniffer on both network service access points trying to establish communication, the results can be compared. If point A has no record of sending certain packets that show up in the log at point B, and vice versa, then the packet log inconsistencies show that those packets have been forged and injected by an intermediary access point. Usually TCP resets are sent to both access points to disrupt communication.[2][3][4]