Half of Mumbai’s home wireless internet networks unsecure
May 24th, 2010 - 10:06 pm ICT by IANS
Mumbai, May 24 (IANS) Mumbai Police had a shock in store on the inaugural day of its Cyber Safety Week here Monday with a survey suggesting that nearly half of the home wireless internet networks in the city were vulnerable to hacking by terror groups.
The launch of the safety week marked the release of the survey, carried out by KPMG, in the evening on unsecured wireless networks in the city.
The survey covering 28,000 wireless networks revealed that out of the total, nearly 9,500 networks (34 percent) had little or no protection that could be easily compromised with 4,700 having no protection at all.
Another 5,000 networks had default network name settings which were vulnerable to hacking, the KPMG survey revealed.
Sixty percent of all business wireless networks (2,900) had either or no protection, with 1,600 totally unprotected.
Besides, another 4,900 (48 percent) of all home wireless networks had little or no protection and 1,700 were completely unprotected, said the survey, aimed at identifying the security risks in a wireless network environment in Mumbai.
Though a large number of wireless networks in Mumbai are protected, a significant number of them exist with little or no protection at all, said KPMG executive director Nitin Khanapurkar.
The number of Wireless Networks in Mumbai has shown exponential growth. While there has been growing awareness of wireless security, the number of vulnerable wireless networks that can be potentially misused, are significant in number, he added.
“It was surprising to find that a large number of business wireless networks were unsecured. We should try to secure every wireless network as a chain is as strong as its weakest link,” said Khanapurkar.
Noted IT security expert Vijay Mukhi pointed out that wireless security is important from a national security perspective.
“We cannot allow our networks to be abused by anti-social and anti-national forces. We need to support Mumbai Police on this initiative as it is a matter of national importance,” Mukhi urged.
Some of the major risks of vulnerable wireless networks include unauthorized access to objectionable or banned sites, access to post objectionable material on websites, access to send threatening e-mails and extract bank account details causing monetary losses.
It may be recalled that during one of the terror attacks in Gujarat two years ago, an unsecured wireless network belonging to US national Kenneth Haywood, living in Navi Mumbai, had been hacked by Indian Mujahideen terrorists to send terror messages.
- Jama Masjid attack: Mumbai Police hunting SIM card user - Sep 21, 2010
- Google to delete personal data collected accidentally - Nov 21, 2010
- Indian parents wary of kids getting hooked online: Survey - Jun 22, 2011
- Hackers say they obtained US police information - Aug 08, 2011
- Wi-fi in homes can be hacked in five seconds - Oct 15, 2010
- Varanasi terror e-mails tracked to Navi Mumbai - Dec 08, 2010
- Spat over Varanasi bombing, police clueless (Roundup) - Dec 08, 2010
- Data, not voice, will now drive telecom growth: Report - Dec 13, 2011
- Google fires engineer for privacy violation - Sep 15, 2010
- Engineering student designs computer-operated car in Coimbatore - Oct 13, 2010
- Users at risk of IE bug, warns Microsoft - Dec 24, 2010
- NIA website taken down to tighten anti-hacking security - Jul 05, 2011
- UK kids with own Internet profile are 'vulnerable' to grooming online - Apr 20, 2011
- Bhatkal brothers behind Varansi blast: Police (Lead) - Dec 08, 2010
- Government to issue guidelines to Internet service providers - Sep 16, 2008
Tags: cyber safety, default network, executive director, exponential growth, home wireless networks, kpmg survey, launch, may 24, mumbai, national security, network environment, nitin, security expert, security perspective, security risks, terror groups, unsecure, weakest link, wireless internet networks, wireless security