Wide-open Wi-Fi worrisome, U of S students say - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 10:17 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

Wide-open Wi-Fi worrisome, U of S students say

Students at the University of Saskatchewan are being warned about the potential hazards of free wireless internet.

Students at the University of Saskatchewan are being warned about the potential hazards of free wireless internet.

Like many universities across Canada, theuniversity lets people log onto the net for no charge. But two student journalists say people should be aware of the risks of Wi-Fi "session hijacking" in particular.

To make the point, Ishmael Daro and Kevin Menz recently hacked into the computers of their fellow students bydownloading a free, easily obtainedplugin to their webbrowser. They set upat the university's library and what they found might give some websurfers pause.

"As soon as we turned my computer on, with this software running on it, we started to see people logging into their email accounts," Daro said.

"You could double-click on their name, get back into their email, get back into their Facebook."

The two recently wrote in the campus newspaper, the Sheaf, that Hotmail and other Windows Live services seemed to crack open easily. Other sites they could get into included Amazon.com, Tumblr and Flickr.

Gmail accounts, on the other hand, were safe.

According to Glenn Hollinger,a spokesman for the university's information technology services, there are two main ways to log into the university's Wi-Fi network one secure and one unsecured.

"We prefer people use the secure version, for obvious reasons," he said.

The catch, according to Daro and Menz, is that some students may not know that choosing the unsecured access opens the door for electronic eavesdroppers.

It's also may be tougher for people with older computers to log on to the secure network, they said.

Theuniversity says it plans to eventually phase out the unsecure network.