SBN

Don’t bank at Starbucks


The Wall Street Journal’s Walt Mossberg has some sage advice here about what you should and SHOULD NOT do on public Wi-Fi networks. The reality is that it’s easy to compromise your machine and your data on these networks. A bad guy can set up a fake access point, or compromise your internal routing tables, or download a Trojan onto your machine.

I know, I know – what else are you going to do at Starbucks? You’ve got a couple of options. Personally, I use a 3G EVDO wireless service from Verizon (Sprint and AT&T also have competing services) to provide my connectivity when I’m out of the office.

Yet, the reality is that I do connect on some public WiFi networks. It’s not frequent, but it does happen. To protect those sessions, I use a public VPN service to encrypt the traffic from my machine to the Internet. The service I use is from WiTopia. There are a bunch of other one’s and you could also set up a proxy server on your own network if you are technically-inclined.

The main point is to reiterate Mossberg’s view. Don’t do anything sensitive on a public WiFi network. It’s bad for the health of your identity.

*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Security Mike's Blog authored by Mike Rothman. Read the original post at: http://securitymike.blogspot.com/2008/02/dont-bank-at-starbucks.html

Avatar photo

Mike Rothman

Mike is a 25+-year security veteran, specializing in the sexy aspects of security, such as protecting networks and endpoints, security management, compliance and helping clients navigate a secure evolution to the cloud.

mike-rothman has 38 posts and counting.See all posts by mike-rothman