A behind-the-scenes security war raged at a recent Wi-Fi trade show, according to a company that provides wireless LAN security monitoring products. Most attendees and exhibitors didn't know they were the subjects of the often-successful attacks, according to AirDefense, Inc. The company monitored the airwaves at the Wi-Fi Planet Expo held earlier in December in San Jose.. . .. A behind-the-scenes security war raged at a recent Wi-Fi trade show, according to a company that provides wireless LAN security monitoring products. Most attendees and exhibitors didn't know they were the subjects of the often-successful attacks, according to AirDefense, Inc. The company monitored the airwaves at the Wi-Fi Planet Expo held earlier in December in San Jose. One likely reason for the attacks was to gather competitive intelligence, according to Fred Tanzella, AirDefense's chief security officer. "You can go around to your competitors' booths to get competitive information, but this type of attack is more aggressive," Tanzella said in an interview Monday. After a successful attack, hackers can get into their victims' corporate LANs, he noted. Tanzella acknowledged, though, that he had no first-hand information about why the attacks were launched or who launched them. AirDefense maintained that, in a single day at the show, it detected 21 attempted man-in-the-middle attacks, 16 of which succeeded. These attacks can steal user names and passwords from improperly protected Wi-Fi clients logging on to a virtual private network, Tanzella said. The link for this article located at SecurityPipeline.com is no longer available. . A digital battle erupted during a cybersecurity expo, featuring multiple breaches that targeted both visitors and vendors.. Wi-Fi Security, Wireless Network Attacks, Trade Show Intelligence. . Anthony Pell
THE corporate spy trade is booming. One-quarter of Australia's largest companies admit they are involved in "competitive intelligence gathering", according to a PricewaterhouseCoopers survey. The information-gathering techniques are almost always legal and carried out by trained professionals - often former government intelligence operatives highly trained in obtaining military and economic secrets. . . .. THE corporate spy trade is booming. One-quarter of Australia's largest companies admit they are involved in "competitive intelligence gathering", according to a PricewaterhouseCoopers survey. The information-gathering techniques are almost always legal and carried out by trained professionals - often former government intelligence operatives highly trained in obtaining military and economic secrets. But the operatives were spying on competing companies rather than foreign governments, and many companies were easy targets, PwC dispute analysis and investigations director Richard Batten said. "Corporations have people trained to obtain raw data from a wide range of sources and apply traditional intelligence analysis techniques to produce usable information," he said. "It's worrying to find 62 per cent of companies have no protection in place to stop the loss or theft of intellectual property -- even though 30 per cent admit already experiencing at least one incident." The link for this article located at News.com is no longer available. . THE corporate spy trade is booming. One-quarter of Australia's largest companies admit they are invo. corporate, trade, booming, one-quarter, australia's, largest, companies, admit. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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