Enterprises continue to battle the installation of unauthorized, or rogue, wireless LAN access points (AP) on corporate networks by employees who install the increasingly cheap devices unmindful of the security risks, according to speakers here today at Computerworld's Mobile and Wireless . . . . Enterprises continue to battle the installation of unauthorized, or rogue, wireless LAN access points (AP) on corporate networks by employees who install the increasingly cheap devices unmindful of the security risks, according to speakers here today at Computerworld's Mobile and Wireless Conference. Tom Dillon, manager for mobile and wireless at Hilton Hotels Corp. in Beverly Hills, Calif., said the management of a Hilton hotel he recently visited assured him that the property's network had in operation only six authorized WLAN APs. Dillon said he fired up sniffer software and quickly detected 15 APs at the hotel, which he declined to identify. That, he said, clearly illustrates the continued proliferation of rogue APs, which he said IT managers need to battle with strict policies. He also called on companies to institute strong authentication policies to ensure that only authorized users can gain access to wireless networks carrying sensitive business information. That's absolutely necessary, he said, for businesses such as hotels that operate both public and private WLANs in the same space. The link for this article located at ComputerWorld is no longer available. . Enterprises continue to battle the installation of unauthorized, or rogue, wireless LAN access point. enterprises, continue, battle, installation, unauthorized, rogue, wireless, point. . Anthony Pell
The major Internet backbone networks for the Pacific Northwest converge at a single location: the Westin building in Seattle, a 32-story structure that houses dozens of major and minor Internet service providers. It is also home to more than 50 . . . . The major Internet backbone networks for the Pacific Northwest converge at a single location: the Westin building in Seattle, a 32-story structure that houses dozens of major and minor Internet service providers. It is also home to more than 50 wireless networks, most of which apparently have no security. "The Westin building is the Northwest nexus for all the fiber. Everyone who is anyone is colocated there," said Josh Pennell, CEO and principal consultant for Seattle security firm IOActive, who recently visited his company's servers at the site. "You can think about the mayhem that people can cause by getting onto that. It's pretty scary stuff." The link for this article located at News.com is no longer available. . Unsafe network configurations within the Westin building in Seattle create significant risk exposure for service vendors.. Westin Building, Network Liability, Internet Security. . Anthony Pell
In our wireless world, can solicitors find you anywhere within cell range if you have a data-ready wireless phone turned on? Internet users have for years been complaining about unwanted email, or spam, with messages that promise everything from quick cash . . . . In our wireless world, can solicitors find you anywhere within cell range if you have a data-ready wireless phone turned on? Internet users have for years been complaining about unwanted email, or spam, with messages that promise everything from quick cash to an enhanced love life. Consumers now are concerned about spam sent to their wireless devices such as Internet-ready phones, and Congress is taking notice. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . In our wireless world, can solicitors find you anywhere within cell range if you have a data-ready w. wireless, world, solicitors, anywhere, within, range, data-ready. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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