Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Use a long passphrase for your wi-fi network

I was really chilled by this article on how easy it is to crack even seemingly-unguessable wi-fi passwords. I haven't kept up with the state of the art, and didn't realize how convenient the password cracking tools have become, nor did I know about the "deauth" trick the author describes.

The bottom line is, your basic Internet security hygiene now needs to include using uncrackable wi-fi passwords, particularly if you live or work in a wi-fi dense area that presents a "target-rich" environment to an attacker (such as the one where the author's office is located).

But what are you supposed to do, tell every house or business guest who wants to get on your wi-fi that the password is "Heyw00Dj@buZZoffe!!!69ass353q1"? That's lame. Instead I recommend choosing a random, distinctive passphrase of easy-to-spell unrelated words, separated by spaces.

For a business, I would also recommend changing the password on a regular basis. Many routers also have a "guest network" function that provides an isolated network to guests. That way you don't have to give guests access to your internal network in order for them to hop on the Internet.

3 comments:

Bill Mill said...

You can also check your router's configuration page, there should be a place where it lists all connected clients. I do so periodically to see if there's any devices I don't recognize on my network.

Nicholas Evans said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Nicholas Evans said...

Personally, I'm with Bruce Schneier on this one. ;-)