Slashdot Mirror


Fixing Wireless Security By Pulling The Plug

An anonymous reader writes "It seems as though the Japanese government is paying attention to some security concerns of wireless networks, and rather than addressing the problem, taking a more aggressive but perhaps not as thorough approach to the issue at hand. Not very technical, but at least its good to see governments actually doing something about it."

2 of 133 comments (clear)

  1. I'm pretty sure by TerryAtWork · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That there's a project on Sourceforge to implement strong encryption on WANs to overcome the WAP problem.

    Can anyone elaborate on this, please?

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
  2. Security is in the eyes of the beholder.(or admin) by t0qer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Unless you are doing a weekly sweep of your network, and documenting the changes, any network, wired or wireless is suspectable to comprimise.

    Using any cheap hub, a few gel cell batteries, and some cat5 wiring knowledge, a person with physical access to the building could hide a 802.11 unit in the ceiling tile, crawlspace, outdoors in the bushes, and for the duration of the charge create a gateway into said network. Add a device (such as the dreamcast) or comprimise a computer internally to broadcast and it becomes darn near untracable.

    The major problem with most 802.11 installs is the admin simple does not do enough accounting and locking down on their network. If they would just reject all unknown mac addresses and accept from a known list WITH the added benifit of encypting all the traffic there would be NOTHING to worry about.

    Why doesn't someone just point that out to them? Hey Japan out of work IT dude right here in USA--I stay up all night PST playin EQ so we're on the same time zone pretty much (ba-bump)
    I can SSH remotely I'll work cheaper than any indian too (baBumpTa!)