Monday, March 05, 2007

WiFi Connection Is Leaking All Kinds of Information

Simply booting up a Wi-Fi-enabled laptop can tell people sniffing wireless network traffic a lot about your computer--and about you.

Soon after a computer powers up, it starts looking for wireless networks and network services. Even if the wireless hardware is then shut-off, a snoop may already have caught interesting data. Much more information can be plucked out of the air if the computer is connected to an access point, in particular an access point without security.

"You're leaking all kinds of information that an attacker can use," David Maynor, chief technology officer at Errata Security, said Thursday in a presentation at the Black Hat DC event here. "If the government was taking this information from you, people would be up in arms. Yet you're leaking this voluntarily using your laptop at the airport."

There are many tools that let anyone listen in on wireless network traffic. These tools can capture information such as usernames and passwords for e-mail accounts and instant message tools as well as data entered into unsecured Web sites. At the annual Defcon hacker gathering, a "wall of sheep" always lists captured log-in credentials.

Errata has developed another network sniffer that looks for traffic using 25 protocols, including those for the popular instant message clients as well as DHCP, SNMP, DNS and HTTP. This means the sniffer will capture requests for network addresses, network management tools, Web sites queries, Web traffic and more.

"You don't realize how much you're making public, so I wrote a tool that tells you," said Robert Graham, Errata's chief executive. The tool will soon be released publicly on the Black Hat Web site. Anyone with a wireless card will be able to run it, Graham said. Errata also plans to release the source code on its Web site.

The Errata sniffer, dubbed Ferret, packs more punch than other network sniffers already available, such as Ethereal and Kismet, because it looks at so many different protocols, Graham said. Some at Black Hat called it a "network sniffer on steroids."

Snoops can use the sniffer tools to see all kinds of data from wireless-equipped computers, regardless of the operating system.

For example, as a Windows computer starts up, it will emit the list of wireless networks the PC has connected to in the past, unless the user manually removed those entries from the preferred networks list in Windows. "The list can be used to determine where the laptop has been used," Graham said.

Apple Mac OS X computers will share information such as the version of the operating system through the Bonjour feature, Graham said. Bonjour is designed to let users create networks of nearby computers and devices.

Additionally, computers shortly after start-up typically broadcast the previous Internet Protocol address and details on networked drives or devices such as printers that it tries to connect to, Graham said.

"These are all bits of otherwise friendly information," Graham said. But in the hands of the wrong person, they could help attack the computer owner or network. Furthermore, the information could be useful for intelligence organizations, he said.

And that's just what the data snoops can sniff out of the air when a laptop is starting up. If the computer is then connected to a wireless network, particularly the unsecured type at hotels, airports and coffee shops, much more can be gleaned. Hackers have also cracked basic Wi-Fi security, so secured networks can't provide a security guarantee.

In general, experts advise against using wireless networks to connect to sensitive Web sites such as online banking. However, it is risky to use any online service that requires a password. The Errata team sniffed one reporter's e-mail username and password at Black Hat and displayed it during a presentation.

People who have the option of using a Virtual Private Network when connected to a wireless network should use it to establish a more secure connection, experts suggest. Also, on home routers WPA, or Wi-Fi Protected Access, offers improved security over the cracked WEP, or Wired Equivalent Privacy.

"The best solution is to be aware of the danger," Graham said. "Everyone doesn't need to work from a coffee shop."

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Via ZDNet India

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Friday, March 02, 2007

US yawns at Wi-Fi enabled phones

Market watcher Ovum reckons that only one US mobile phone subscriber in 50 will have a Wi-Fi enabled phone by 2010. Dual-mode phones that support both WLAN and cellular are already a familiar sight in the Europe and Asia markets. Most of Nokia's E series, and its N80 consumer smart phone, feature both standards.

But in the US, carriers have hampered the adoption of WLAN-capable handsets. Ovum says the industry needs a "reality check" and predicts that less than 5.5 million subscribers will have onboard WLAN.

As for convergence: You won't get there from here, advises Ovum.

"Everyone in the telecoms industry is still too focused on dual-mode phones, even though the people working in the trenches are beginning to voice real skepticism that dual-mode services will ever take off," concludes Ovum's Jan Dawson.

"Overall, it's time for a reality check and for carriers to move on to the forms of fixed-mobile convergence which have real potential for commercial launch. Recent merger and acquisition activity has left us with three major players with a significant opportunity to combine wireline and wireless offerings, but we've yet to see any real moves in this direction. Now is the time to act."

Or, er... what? We wonder. Well, fixed-mobile convergence might not happen - which would happen to suit the three big US incumbents quite nicely.

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Via TheRegister

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Wi-Fi on the Trains Is a Great Success

The York-based train company's Wi-Fi initiative, which created the world's biggest fleet of Wi-Fi-equipped train carriages, won the information technology excellence award, at the HSBC Rail Awards.

The East Coast Main Line operator was also short-listed in the rail safety and security excellence categories - a night of success that could be seen as sadly ironic since the company was forced to give up its franchise.

More than 1,000 of the rail industry's senior executives were joined at the event in London by the Rail Minister Tom Harris MP and the Shadow Transport Secretary, Chris Grayling MP.

GNER's chief executive, Jonathan Metcalfe, said: "Wireless internet is attracting many new passengers to GNER, and this award is recognition of the vision and hard work of many people.

"Many passengers who are switching to the train instead of the car or the plane are telling us that being able to keep in touch throughout the journey using Wi-Fi is a key reason for their choice.

"Feedback from passengers has been very positive and usage levels are rising."

The short-listed bidders for the East Coast franchise - Arriva, First Rail, National Express, and a partnership of Virgin and Stagecoach - have been jostling to win the Government contract to operate the potentially lucrative line between Edinburgh and King's Cross.

But GNER management, generally recognised as one of the most efficient in the rail industry, has been approached by more than one of the "shortlisters" to team up with them should they succeed.

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Via YorkPress

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