By
Tom Espiner, ZDNet UK
Monday, July 10 2006 02:10 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/techguide/wireless/0,39044905,39373660,00.htm
A large percentage of Wi-Fi networks are "horribly insecure", according to
researchers at Indiana University.
In a study of almost 2,500 access points in Indianapolis, presented at the Workshop on the Economics of Information Security at the
University of Cambridge on Monday, researchers found that 46 percent were not
running any form of encryption.
"People just really don't care about Wi-Fi security, and open Wi-Fi at home
is a nice big target," said Matthew Hottell, lecturer in informatics at Indiana
University. "Defaults (settings) are king."
Most of the secured networks used routers whose security setting had been
pre-installed by the vendor, rather than having being activated by the end user.
Some used WEP encryption wizards to encourage people to turn on the security
settings.
"Education seems to have little effect. People with a higher economic status
are not responsive to the heightened risk of privacy erosion, and people in
general don't recognize that higher population density (heightens risk),"
Hottell said.
However, security expert Bruce Schneier argued that as long as people's
devices were secure, having a secured network was unnecessary.
"I have a completely open Wi-Fi network," Schneier told ZDNet UK. "Firstly, I
don't care if my neighbors are using my network. Secondly, I've protected my
computers. Thirdly, it's polite. When people come over they can use it."
University of Cambridge security expert Richard Clayton also questioned the
assumption that unsecured networks were necessarily insecure.
"What is your definition of secure?" Clayton asked the researchers. "Did you
try to exploit the systems?" Hottell said the wardriving team had not attempted
to hack any systems or read any network traffic.
Microsoft's chief privacy adviser for Europe, Caspar Bowden, said there
seemed to be a consensus among security experts that having a Wi-Fi network open
to sharing has positive sides, but warned that people could not rely on WEP
encryption if they wanted to secure networks.
"If you do want to secure your network, look at end-to-end solutions rather
than some of the dodgy crypto around like WEP," Bowden said. "There's only one
thing worse than no security, and that's a false sense of security," he added.