Posted on Oct 15, 2007 - 7:39pm by Don Rogers in Business, Computer Tips, Technology
I recently pulled into a truckstop for a break and fired up a wifi connection and logged into one of the internet providers that broadcast to the parking lot. To my surprise I got a message stating that I exceeded my monthly bandwidth quota and if I wanted to use the net I would have to pay more for bandwidth. Well this struck me as odd since I had used this particular service very little over the previous month so I did some looking into my account. Someone had changed some of the info on my account! I then made a call to their customer service and found I had logged on in Oklahoma City earlier that morning, I was in Indiana, and had been their a couple of days!
So what happened? Apparently I had gotten sloppy in logging on somewhere and had not paid attention whether or not I had an https:// connection or just an open http:// connection. Someone had either sniffed my log on or had used a man-in-the-middle attack to snag my password. I had gotten sloppy and this is what these people are looking for!
Protect yourself, always check that you have a secure SSL connection(https://) whenever you send personal info over a wifi connection and get in the habit of changing your passwords on a regular basis.
Truckstops are a wealth of information to identity thieves, so many of us do business online from our cabs, credit cards and personal info can be easily intercepted by these people. Don’t let yourself become a victim by being sloppy.
Be safe on the road and on-line;
Don Rogers
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There’s a post around here about using a VPN I wonder if that would work before you’re logged on?
That truck stop wifi system should tell you every time you log on how much bandwidth you’ve used and the last place you logged on at.
They want to charge for extra bandwidth, but they don’t want to tell you how much you’ve been using!
I have thought about using a VPN but you still have to log in in the clear then establish the VPN connection. I have looked into using a VPN but am concearned it would slow down an already poor wifi connection. Need to do
something, truckstops provide a gold mine of private info to anyone who can sniff the data stream. Tools are readily available to intercept and read the packets sent via wifi.
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