The Wi-Fi Clone Scam

In many major cities there are parks, coffee shops and many other areas that laptop users flock to for the use of a wireless internet. Depending on where these users go, they can even be lucky enough to find a free Wi-Fi hotspot. Unfortunately, that free Wi-Fi just may be a scam.

Scammers set up and clone popular wireless networks and even create free networks and wait for the victims. When someone turns on their laptop, they simply browse the available networks and choose the one that they want. If the scammers are lucky and the
laptop user chooses the cloned network, the scammers now have complete access to their computer.

Many other networks will also ask for a credit card number when a user logs on and scammers will then be able to steal and copy that credit card. The way that wireless networks are set up means that some people will turn on their laptops and automatically connect to the last network that they had previously signed on to. With a cloned Wi-Fi these users could be instantly connected to a scam network.

If there are security and protective software on your laptop, you will find that they will not do much of anything to offer protection against this Wi-Fi scam. There is no a lot that you can do either. The best way to deal with these scammers is to not let them onto your laptop in the first place.

If you use a wireless network, setup the network some place else first. Take a good look at the website so that when you get to that wireless hotspot you should be able to recognize the webpage's. The reason you need to look closely at the correct websites is that a scammer will clone the sites but usually if you know what to look for you will be able to see some differences.

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Even if your computer does get connected to one of the scam networks it is not going to give the scammer "complete access to their computer" right away. The scammer first has to hack into your laptop. If you are running a firewall then you have some level of protection against those hacking attempts. The one thing that does happen is that the scammer has full access to your communication data that travels across the wifi network so when using a public wifi access point don't use it to access your bank account or other secure areas that you don't want others to see the traffic data for.

Posted on 03/30/2007 at 8:03:00 PM

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