Forum Discussion

Tara361's avatar
Tara361
Explorer
Feb 12, 2014

Wi Fi security

Hi folks
If when using a campgrounds pass protected Wi Fi and doing something like bill paying, how secure is my information?
  • All this is assuming there is someone within range of the pop smart enough to use and decipher data coming off of a program like Wireshark. The question here is who has ever been compromised at a campground? It's not exactly the same crowd that hangs at a major airports open wifi
  • See my comments here:

    http://forums.goodsamclub.com/Index.cfm/fuseaction/thread/tid/27424979/gotomsg/27507410.cfm#27507410
  • If it is in the air it can be gotten. Use your phone as a hot spot. Even that is hackable but not as easy.
  • RoyB's avatar
    RoyB
    Explorer II
    I would not want to use any of the WIFI Hot Spots if I was paying bills online... Probably safe and nothing would never happen but why put yourself in that open situation...

    We use the VERIZON MIFI secure MIFI connections and havent had any problems in the past 5-6 years we have been doing this. In my travel years when i was working we all carried VERIZON AIR CARDS and connected thru VPN for all our company connections...

    Alot of folks really like to use antennas and other strange gizmos to use all the open WIFI hot stops they can connect too.. I guess because its free to use. Ocassionally I see some YAGIe type antennas pointing to close by towns to check into the internet through someones hot spot... Not my cup of tea haha...

    Who knows if I am any better off using the Verizon Secure MIFI net but makes me feel like I am and I have no problems checking into the Internet almost anywhere we go to with a great conenction... Using the MIFI connection we can use up to five WIFI connections all at the same time everywhere we go even driving down the road. If the cell phone works on Verizon then the MIFI unit is going to work.

    Roy Ken
  • The CG network is not secure. Everyone has the password to the network.

    That does not mean you connection to the bank is not secure. That is what you want to focus on. Talk to your financial institute and ensure that they are use a Secure Socket Layer (SSL) connection. Do not rely on the HTTPS: at the beginning of the URL address. That should indicate that there is a secure connection but is not a guarantee. Use your finacial inst to pay bills online. That way when you verify that they are using a SSL that you only need that one connection. They pay the bills electronically.

    On the SSL your connection is secured through a key issued to your computer at the login page. The login info is also secured.

    If your financial inst. has VPN then better.
  • Anybody with the password has an easy ride. Go to you financial institutions and tell you want a crypto card and use it..
  • It's always a matter of situational awareness.

    -Is the password widely distributed? At a campground that prints the password on every piece of paper distributed at the office? Or posted on a permanent sign outside the office?

    -Is the password a tough one? Is it just the campground's phone number or address? Or some other common word?

    -Is the campground located such that installation of a key logger would be possible or easy?

    -Are the folks working at the campground office personally involved in setting up and maintaining security? Would they use it to pay their own bills?

    :)
    Lynn
  • Depends on the site security. Password protection for the campground's wifi affords zero protection for your data. All it does is keep unauthorized users off the network, your computer sends data unencrypted, so anybody with a radio nearby can catch it all, they just can't log into the network.

    On the other hand, banks and similar sites are supposed to be secure.

    If you want to be certain of your security, you need to use a VPN (virtual private network). This requires a little software on your end plus a subscription to a VPN server. This will establish a fully encrypted connection between you and the VPN server, which then connects via the internet to wherever you are going. But all data to/from your computer will be encrypted.

    How much security you need is a matter of opinion.