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The easy way to avoid a Wi-Fi virus

By | January 4, 2008, 7:29am PST

Summary: It’s flu season—for you and your wireless router. A study by Indiana University proves that a virus can quickly spread among unsecured or WEP-encrypted routers in densely populated urban areas. But networks secured by the WPA protocol were impenetrable, and that gives you one more good reason to really secure your network. The study, [...]

It’s flu season—for you and your wireless router. A study by Indiana University proves that a virus can quickly spread among unsecured or WEP-encrypted routers in densely populated urban areas. But networks secured by the WPA protocol were impenetrable, and that gives you one more good reason to really secure your network.

The study, written by Hao Hu and colleagues, found that malware can easily spread among unprotected (and underprotected) routers whose signals overlap. And this malware can spread faster than any human flu: The majority of infections could happen within the first 24 to 48 hours, affecting 10 percent to 55 percent of routers in an entire metropolitan area within two weeks. Alarmingly, the study points out that malware designers are evolving from kudo-seeking hackers to organized crime coders looking for ways to launder money and commit fraud.

The study focused on New York, Chicago, Seattle, Boston, San Francisco, and northern and southern Indiana. In these areas, only 20 percent to 41 percent of routers used WEP or WPA encryption. To gain access to the routers and simulate the spread of malware, the researches attempted to guess the password (many people don’t change the factory default) from a list of 65,000 words that are commonly used. It wasn’t all that difficult, as the results prove. The study concludes by noting that the increasing number of Wi-Fi-enabled components that will connect to routers makes the possibility of infection even more serious.

There is no software specifically designed for routers that would guard against such attacks, but it’s easy to inoculate your network: Simply use WPA encryption and strong passwords. (WEP isn’t good enough, because it can be easily cracked, given time.) To date, I know of no attempt to infect wireless routers. But the buzz is all over the Net, and that’s got to get malguys thinking.

So secure your network with WPA and use strong passwords. Then consider a flu shot for yourself.

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Disclosure

Rik Fairlie

http://blogs.zdnet.com/fairlie/?page_id=100

Biography

Rik Fairlie

For the past 15 years, Rik Fairlie has covered technology and the business of technology for numerous publications and Web sites, including CNET, PC Magazine, Computer Shopper, Family PC, and Mobile Computing. He has also published tech stories in The New York Times, Frequent Flyer, and Travel & Leisure. Rik has served as editor in chief of Computer Shopper and managing editor of Mobile Communications. ///

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best password scema
rparker009 30th Sep 2009
use a phase with special characters for the password. Ie "N0w th1s p@ssw0rd w0uld b3 harder to breAk"
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No such word as "kudo"
martin@... 4th Jan 2008
There is no such word as "kudo". "Kudos" is not a plural, it is a greek word meaning, literally, "praise". You should have used the term "kudos-seeking", not "kudo-seeking".
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RE: The easy way to avoid a Wi-Fi virus
eeandersen99@... 4th Jan 2008
How about MAC address security? Packet sniffers can still see your data, but no one gets onto your network.
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MAC Address Spoofing
endermc12 4th Jan 2008
MAC address filtering is marginally secure at best. A MAC address can be spoofed as easily as an e-mail address.
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Dont use WIFI.
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RE: The easy way to avoid a Wi-Fi virus
gwrutter@... 14th Jan 2008
Unless you have frequent guests to you network, don't broadcast your SSID and turn on MAC filtering.
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That would be good
Leria 14th Jan 2008
If it wasn't for the fact that most wireless laptops have a problem connecting to a router that is not broadcasting it's wireless SSID.

Believe me, I have had that problem myself, tried shutting off the broadcasting of SSID after I heard that it would make my network more safe..... didn't work. My Toshiba laptop just WOULD NOT CONNECT to a router that wasn't broadcasting it's SSID.... didn't even realize it was there.
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do broadcast your ssid
impala_sc 14th Jan 2008
I have to suffer at work with a wireless net that doesn't broadcast it's SSID. This has several effects:

1: it doesn't help security. A hacker can still intercept the packets and attempt to crack them. Once cracked, they have no problem finding the SSID. You cannot hide your wireless network unless you physically shield it. Strong encryption keeps you safe. That's it.

2: if you have multiple access points, it breaks seamless roaming.

3: many systems can deal with one and only one known hidden SSID network. If you have one at home and one at work you are going to have problems.

4: I frequently have trouble dealing with users who used an open network (ie their hotel or starbucks) on a trip and come back to work and be unable to connect. Windows needs a kick in the pants to reconnect to the hidden one.
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Absolutely - WPA is the only way.
Sparhawk_z 14th Jan 2008
Having a hidden SSID will have your laptop spewing out the SSID looking for the 'hidden' network. MAC filtering also doesn't help as I can easily clone a MAC address.

Think AirPcap or any of the dozens of freely available sniffer tools that will literally grab the info out of the air.
WPA is the only way to secure a network, with a strong password - upper case, lower case and numbers, something maybe 10 characters or longer.

My laptop also has issues when I try and connect to a hidden WLAN after being connected to a public LAN. I always have to manually re-connect even though a profile is set up and told to auto connect.
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best password scema
rparker009 30th Sep 2009
use a phase with special characters for the password. Ie "N0w th1s p@ssw0rd w0uld b3 harder to breAk"
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RE: The easy way to avoid a Wi-Fi virus
ndoing@... 14th Jan 2008
Some game systems don't work with WAP (nintendo ds)... only as strong as the weakest link

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