Secret Service 'war driving' for unsecure WLANs
Computerworld - The U.S. Secret Service has hooked up Pringles cans to notebook computers equipped with wireless LAN access cards and begun "war driving" around Washington and other cities in an effort to sniff out unsecured WLANs.
That puts the Secret Service, whose primary mission is to guard the president, in the company of hobbyist WLAN war drivers who cruise cities and towns around the world to detect and map unsecured WLAN systems.
(The term war driving is derived from the "war-dialing" exploits of the teenage hacker character in the 1983 movie WarGames, who has his computer randomly dial hundreds of numbers and eventually winds up tapping into a nuclear command-and-control system. )
Brian Marr, a Secret Service spokesman, said the agency conducts its war drives as part of its protective mission and is searching for unsecured WLAN systems in venues in "close proximity" to its protective assignments, including hospitals, convention centers and hotels. Besides Pringles cans -- which Marr said make "fairly good" antennas -- Secret Service agents also use commercial high-gain antennas to sniff out unsecured LANs.
When the agents from the Secret Service Electronic Crimes Task Force detect an unsecure WLAN, they contact the enterprise operating the system, identify themselves and inform the business of any vulnerabilities they have detected. Marr described this as a "community outreach program," in the same spirit as local police officers going door to door in a neighborhood to talk to residents about physical vulnerabilities.
Sarosh Vesuna, chairman of the technical committee for the Wi-Fi Alliance (formerly the Wireless Ethernet Compatibility Alliance) in Mountain View, Calif., viewed the Secret Service war driving as a good idea. "It raises the bar for security," he said.
Vesuna, who is also director of strategic alliances at Symbol Technologies Inc. in Holtsville, N.Y., said the Secret Service war-driving and notification project is the electronic version of a police officer "telling someone their door is unlocked."
The Secret Service will soon have a lot of war-driving competition. A loosely organized band of WLAN sniffer hobbyists plans to conduct what it bills as the "World-Wide War Drive" from Oct. 26 through Nov. 2. So far, hobbyists covering a wide swath of the U.S. and Canada -- as well as in Barcelona, Spain; Germany; Wellington, New Zealand; and Perth, Australia -- have indicated that they plan to participate in the exercise.
Using notebooks equipped with WLAN cards and sniffing freeware, such as NetStumbler, the hobbyists detected and precisely mapped (using Global Positioning System receivers) 9,374 WLAN access points in the firstWorld-Wide War Drive, which ran from Aug. 31 to Sept. 7. Almost 70%, or 6,549 of the access points, didn't have the simplest form of WLAN security, Wired Equivalent Protocol, turned on.
Read more about Mobile and Wireless in Computerworld's Mobile and Wireless Topic Center.


- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Mobile Middleware Strategies
- Learn why a mobile development platform is critical to be able to support today's complex enterprise mobility strategies. Learn what to look for...
- The Evolution of Enterprise Mobile App Development
- Driven by explosive growth in smartphone and tablet sales, enterprise mobility has become an essential part of business. Organizations across industries are developing...
- Native & HTML5 Mobile Apps: Not an either or, but a where and when
- Learn how developers are using HTML5 and native development methods to build mobile apps. Get practical insights on how these tools are being...
- Enabling Remote Employees with High Quality Video
- In this paper, we analyze the delivery of live and on-demand mobile video content. It focuses on specific ways in which organizations can...
- What to Look For in Solutions For Mobile Device Management
- Managing an increasingly mobile workforce has become one of the most challenging - and important - responsibilities for IT departments. This paper examines... All Mobile and Wireless White Papers
- The Office of Tomorrow with BlackBerry
- Curious about the office of the future and how to prepare with BlackBerry solutions? This session discusses the office needs of tomorrow and...
- The Changing Role of Tablets in the Enterprise
- Do you understand all the capabilities and potential of the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet? BlackBerry® PlayBook™ tablet can help enterprises do business differently.
This webcast... - Security Certifications 101 - BlackBerry and all those acronyms what do they mean and why they matter?
- FIPS, Common Criteria, CAPS, AISEP, NFC, NIST, Fraunhofer SIT, CESG, DSD - these are just some of the government and industry certifications which...
- PlayBook Video about two Grade 6 classrooms that are using PlayBook tablets
- RIM recently worked with Park Manor Public School in Elmira, ON to integrate BlackBerry PlayBook tablets in two Grade 6 classrooms. The project...
- McCain Canada deployed BlackBerry PlayBook tablets with a custom application to their salesforce
- McCain Foods Limited (McCain) has deployed BlackBerry® PlayBook™ tablets in order to enhance mobility within their sales force- along with a customized application... All Mobile and Wireless Webcasts
Prepaid service has started to transform from a source of cheap, bottom-of-the-barrel phones into a viable outlet for compelling smartphones. Read more...