- 4chan hell raisers finding fame brings heat?
- The 10 dumbest mistakes network managers make
- NetApp quits bidding war in face of EMC opposition
- CompuServe closes after 30 years
- Google to launch open-source Chrome OS this year
Rick Hill won't say where he launched his "wardriving" balloon on Friday, but he will tell you that it got a pretty good look at about 370 wireless networks, while scanning up and down the Las Vegas Strip.
Hidden in the back of a 22 foot (6.7 meters) moving truck, Hill and his team of about a dozen volunteers launched the balloon Friday morning, sending it 150 feet into the air for about 20 minutes to use special antennas and scanning software to scope out the Las Vegas skyline for unsecured wireless networks, an activity Hill calls "warballooning."
Hackers have practiced wardriving for years, driving around in cars with computers and specialized software that sniffs for networks.
Two years ago Hill set his sights a little higher and fired off a model rocket loaded with similar equipment -- and gave a Defcon presentation on that project -- but warballooning is something new. In his day job Hill is a senior scientist with Tenacity Solutions, a security services consultancy in Reston, Va., that works with the government.
Despite methodical preparation for this year's Defcon, and Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) approval, Hill's warballoon almost didn't take off at all.
That's because management at the Riviera Hotel, host of the Defcon hacking conference, changed its mind late last week and told him that he could not launch the balloon from hotel property. In fact, the Riviera said, he couldn't even bring the warballoon into the hotel. The reason for the grounding was vague. Riviera staffers told Hill that local police were concerned after a nearby casino had complained of the operation.
Hill suspects that local authorities might have been spooked by the fact that he called his device a warballoon. Something less bellicose might not have caught anyone's attention.
Still, he and the team who helped him were upset at being grounded. They felt that they had met all the legal requirements, but they couldn't get FAA approval to launch the balloon from another nearby location on such short notice.
But Hill, an amateur rocketeer, knows his FAA regulations, and he realized that if he launched the balloon more than five miles from Las Vegas's McCarran International Airport, he wouldn't need any federal sign-off.
The balloon he was using was rented from a national company that rents out the devices for real-estate photography. And though he knew that the balloon was perfectly legal to fly, he was still a little worried about local police shutting him down."That's when we did plan B: the covert operation," he said.
Comments (6)
Open WirelessBy Anonymous on August 18, 2008, 5:50 pmHere Silicon Valley their lot of companies that have unsecured Wifi at first glance but you can't connect to the network or internet with out connecting to the Firewall...
Reply | Read entire comment
free wifi deliberately unsecuredBy Anon on August 12, 2008, 3:38 pmTrue, true
Reply | Read entire comment
Free Wifi, deliberately unsecuredBy Anonymous on August 11, 2008, 2:17 pmHow many of the unsecured wireless access points were deliberately unsecured? For example, several coffee shops down the street from where I live have "Free Wifi"...
Reply | Read entire comment
It was in Vegas...By Anonymous on August 11, 2008, 9:36 amWith all the hotels offering free internet access, and various hot spots, I'm not sure the value of the data. If it was in: let's say D.C. or Seattle business district,...
Reply | Read entire comment
Router interface.By Chris on August 10, 2008, 5:25 pmSometimes they do encourage setting a password, however, they're stupid about it. I just changed the settings on a router for a customer who'd set it up as per...
Reply | Read entire comment
View all comments