The fundamental issue exploited here is the lack of authentication for 802.11 management frames.
Short answer: No.
WPA3’s Protected Management Frames (PMF) is mandatory. The "exclusive" attacks of today rely on unauthenticated management frames. However, researchers have already found flaws in WPA3’s transitional mode (mixing WPA2 and WPA3). Any true "exclusive" exploit in the future will target this hybrid mode. wpa kill exclusive
To stay ahead:
This is the most common technique. An attacker sends forged de-authentication frames from the access point to a client (or broadcast to all clients), forcing them to disconnect. The fundamental issue exploited here is the lack
Exclusive twist: An "exclusive" version automates this across multiple channels simultaneously, targeting every BSSID in range. This is the most common technique