
“With Wi-Fi access at airports, hotels, and aboard airplanes, business travelers don’t have to look very hard for a wireless Internet connection
But with these public wireless hotspots becoming more prevalent, in addition to more travelers using smart phones for Web access, are business travelers putting themselves at a security risk?
The short answer, some technology security experts say, is yes. But they add that the use of Wi-Fi at these spots is no riskier than at a coffee shop.
“It’s a shared medium, and if you can connect to it, someone else can connect to it and monitor your traffic,” said Marty Linder, a senior member of the technical staff at the Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute CERT/Coordination Center. “That has nothing to do with the security of the network. It’s just the nature of the beast.”
For Fran Hanna, the convenience isn’t worth the risk. The sales representative from Chapin, South Carolina, would frequently bring her computer on business trips and access Wi-Fi through her hotels. Hackers tapped into her computer, resulting in inappropriate material being sent through her account.
She had to get her computer restored twice, which cost her $900. And while she still isn’t sure where she was when she picked up the malware, she said the only wireless device she will bring with her as she travels is a cell phone for voice calls.
On the other hand, picking up public wireless isn’t a major concern to Brian Fitzpatrick, the CTO of a technology firm in Alpharetta, Georgia, and a frequent business traveler.
He generally avoids transmitting sensitive personal or company data using these hotspots. But as he sees it, having his information stolen “is more likely to happen in some face-to-face transaction than it is even online.”
In addition to open networks, experts say the physical loss of devices poses a threat for business travelers.
The combination of replacement cost, detection, forensics, data breach, lost intellectual property costs, lost productivity, and legal, consulting and regulatory expenses sets a company back an average of $49,246 per lost laptop, according to a study released in April by the Ponemon Institute and sponsored by the Intel Corporation.
However, lost laptops with encryption saved companies nearly $20,000, compared with those that did not have encryption, according to the Ponemon study. Encrypted disks safeguard data by scrambling information on them. They unlock that information only when the user enters the proper passcode.” (via cnn.com ) by Debra Alban
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