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tmobilefan
08-06-2007, 08:05 PM
By Byron Acohido, USA TODAY
LAS VEGAS — Laptop road warriors beware: Wi-Fi hot spots that let you hop onto the Internet anywhere you travel leave you wide open to hackers.

The basic problem: T-Mobile and AT&T (T)— the largest providers of Wi-Fi hot spots in coffee shops, bookstores and airports — don't require encryption of data traveling wirelessly between laptops and the Internet. Neither do hotels and municipalities with free Wi-Fi hookups in public areas. T-Mobile and AT&T do recommend customers download and use their free encryption software.

"If you're using Wi-Fi in a public place and you're not getting hacked, it's only because there's nobody around bothering to do it," says Robert Graham, CEO of consultancy Errata Security.

Wi-Fi eavesdropping has long been a security concern. Anyone with a Wi-Fi-equipped laptop can download free Wi-Fi monitoring programs. An eavesdropper can sit up to 100 feet away and monitor what you do on the Net, says Rick Farina, security engineer for wireless security firm AirTight Networks.

There are no estimates of how often this happens. No one has ever been arrested for Wi-Fi hacking. But with Wi-Fi now in mainstream use — T-Mobile and AT&T supply hot spots at more than 15,000 locations in the USA, and cities such as New York and San Francisco supply free public access points — intruders are starting to take advantage, said security experts at recent Black Hat and DefCon security conferences.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: AT | Security | Wi | Mobile | Networks | Laptop | Tom Brennan

Wi-Fi hot-spot hacks "are absolutely taking place," says Tom Brennan, technology risk manager for security consultant Access IT Group. "It's easy to do, and the reward is very high."

Brennan cites an example of a tech systems manager on a lunch break in New York's Bryant Park, who used his laptop via the city's free hot-spot hookup. The manager logged onto his company's network to troubleshoot a computer server. An eavesdropper nabbed his username and password. Later, someone used the information to access the server. "People are on the road using wireless, they get breached, and when they go back into their network, they're owned," Brennan said.

Crooks are using off-the-shelf routers, equipped to broadcast Wi-Fi hookups around the home, to spoof the popular paid services. The spoofer broadcasts a bogus T-Mobile or AT&T connection signal, then captures data transmitted by victims, says Pravin Bhagwat, AirTight's chief technology officer.

"If I'm at a location where a particular hot-spot provider does not provide a service, but still I see its service being advertised, that means it's a spoof," says Bhagwat.

Farino estimates 95% of Wi-Fi data traffic is unencrypted.

Public Wi-Fi use raises hacking risk - USATODAY.com (http://www.usatoday.com/tech/wireless/2007-08-06-wifi-hot-spots_N.htm)

greenblood
08-06-2007, 08:49 PM
here is the very bottom line
you MUST DISABLE file and printer sharing for that wifi card (to block out worm)
use WPA-PSK-TKIP for home and office wifi (don't worry, just make a text file, then copy and paste the passcode)

tmobilefan
08-06-2007, 08:51 PM
here is the very bottom line
you MUST DISABLE file and printer sharing for that wifi card (to block out worm)
use WPA-PSK-TKIP for home and office wifi (don't worry, just make a text file, then copy and paste the passcode)

Yeah, that is a good idea.

greenblood
08-06-2007, 09:01 PM
I learned that hard way
used a wifi stick (the HP internal wifi sucks, often "dropped calls"), and forgot to turn it off
soon the Shared Folder has virus file here and there, is it horrible enough
even though I have VirusScan installed, I run a virus file by accident, and end up to re-install the ENTIRE system
about home wifi, I have a powerful wifi setup, that I have to beef up the security to prevent unauthorized use

tmobilefan
08-06-2007, 09:15 PM
I learned that hard way
used a wifi stick (the HP internal wifi sucks, often "dropped calls"), and forgot to turn it off
soon the Shared Folder has virus file here and there, is it horrible enough
even though I have VirusScan installed, I run a virus file by accident, and end up to re-install the ENTIRE system
about home wifi, I have a powerful wifi setup, that I have to beef up the security to prevent unauthorized use

Wow!:eek:

~Evil~|~Steg~
08-06-2007, 09:23 PM
also a good firewall wouldnt hurt ;)

tmobilefan
08-06-2007, 09:35 PM
also a good firewall wouldnt hurt ;)

Yeah, lol.

What firewall do you have?

Railroader
08-07-2007, 12:58 AM
I can see this happening in NYC, but in the rural and smaller town areas here in NorCal, I can't see this as much of a threat.

ssassy01d
08-07-2007, 07:20 AM
Ok, I have a question, I bought a wireless router, basicly so my kids could get online with their xbox 360, I set it up on the highest security settings on the router, supposidly it has its own firewall plus I run a firewall of my own on my pc, should I be doing anything else to prevent someone from tapping into my system?

~Evil~|~Steg~
08-07-2007, 07:51 AM
Yeah, lol.

What firewall do you have?

in linux i use iptables with a custom script, and a honeypot ;) and in winders i just run coyote from a floppy... but i hear kerio personal firewall is ok, i dont mess with winders to much though...

~Evil~|~Steg~
08-07-2007, 08:02 AM
Ok, I have a question, I bought a wireless router, basicly so my kids could get online with their xbox 360, I set it up on the highest security settings on the router, supposidly it has its own firewall plus I run a firewall of my own on my pc, should I be doing anything else to prevent someone from tapping into my system?

well if ur already running a firewall make sure the rules are good, i usually block all traffic in and out then let it in and out as i need it, the firewall that comes with the routers really isnt the greatest, thats why it good to run ur own instead. lol when u ask 10 diff ppl about firewalls ur gonna get 10 diff answers ya know :)

ssassy01d
08-07-2007, 08:19 AM
lol when u ask 10 diff ppl about firewalls ur gonna get 10 diff answers ya know :)

LOL I know that, and thx, just wanted to make sure that I was doing everything I should be.

Also a piece of advice I learned from a couple of techies I used to chat with a few years ago...
NEVER EVER EVER tell anyone what brand of firewall, antivirus or other security measures you use on your computer, if they know WHAT you're running it makes it easier for them to know how to get around it . ;) If someone who knows their stuff finds out what it is you run to protect you're computer , chances are they know a backdoor around it. So by telling them " I use ***** for a firewall, they'll know what measures to take to get through. They taught me alot of tips and tricks for protecting myself, that seem to be holding true today.

tmobilefan
08-07-2007, 08:24 AM
LOL I know that, and thx, just wanted to make sure that I was doing everything I should be.

Also a piece of advice I learned from a couple of techies I used to chat with a few years ago...
NEVER EVER EVER tell anyone what brand of firewall, antivirus or other security measures you use on your computer, if they know WHAT you're running it makes it easier for them to know how to get around it . ;) If someone who knows their stuff finds out what it is you run to protect you're computer , chances are they know a backdoor around it. So by telling them " I use ***** for a firewall, they'll know what measures to take to get through. They taught me alot of tips and tricks for protecting myself, that seem to be holding true today.

Yeah, that's a good idea!;)

~Evil~|~Steg~
08-07-2007, 08:37 AM
while im in linux i really dont worry about it but in winders yes its something to worry about when u tell someone what ur using.

dsigma6
08-07-2007, 02:29 PM
Disable SSID broadcast. It'll stop your neighbors from seeing your network, and the not-so-intelligent wardriver.

ssassy01d
08-07-2007, 04:32 PM
Thx dsigma6 I'll do that!!

Railroader
08-07-2007, 09:32 PM
Despite living in a very rural area (Mendocino County, NW CA), I have my wireless network locked down tight, including using WPA and hardware and software firewalls. We'd notice somebody sitting outside our house for a while though, and below our house our road turns to dirt, so hackers would kinda stand out lol

dsigma6
08-08-2007, 06:33 AM
Thx dsigma6 I'll do that!!
The only drawback is when adding new devices, you'll have to manually enter the SSID and password. When you scan for networks, nothing will show up. Hence, most people looking to cause trouble would think there were no networks to hack.