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Rubrik: World-wide News/Products & News Security
Issues as Many
Companies Do Not Secure Their In-Building WiFi
Access Point (16.06.08)
- Global Secure Systems (GSS), the specialist IT security reseller and
systems integrator, says that a growing number of gadgets are now appearing
on the market to offer WiFi users extended range
when picking up "free" WiFi signals.
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"These
devices, which can be obtained for under 20.00 pounds or so, can easily
extend the effective range of a WiFi access point
or router up to two or three hundred yards. This means that companies that
think their WiFi access point is limited to their
company building, need to think again," said David Hobson, GSS' managing
director. According
to Hobson, many companies do not secure their in-building WiFi
access point or change their administrator password, because they think the
range of the facility is limited to a few tens of feet within their offices. "A
couple of years ago, this may have been the case, but with an extended range
antenna, often fashioned out of a used Pringles crisps tin, hackers can
easily access company WiFi facilities a block or
more away," he said. "And
if they know the router's default admin password, they can intercept traffic
to their own infected dummy page - Google is a classic example - by changing
the router's DNS lookups, and bingo! You have infected PCs under hacker
control with the company. This can get nasty," he added. Hobson's
comments come after HD Communications has released a sub-200 pound 802.11g WiFi router with a claimed line-of-sight range of up to
five miles - with a non-line-of-sight version due shortly. "802.11g
is rapidly becoming the mainstay of many WiFi
networks, and company kit often supports the newer, if unratified,
802.11n technology, which extends ranges considerably," he said. "Companies
that have installed WiFi networks in their offices
now need to re-examine the range of their systems and always used encryption passwords
on their connections, even for guests in the building. And they should change
their router admin passwords as well," he added. Ideally,
says Hobson, companies offering guest access to WiFi
in their offices should install a second WiFi
router, only connected to the public Internet, and not to any company
resources. That way
he says, they can ensure the security of the Global Secure Systems ir own company WiFi network,
which still requires regular monitoring, updates and password changes. For more on
five-mile WiFi: http://tinyurl.com/3u354b
(Global
Secure Systems: ra) |
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