forbes.com — Richard Farina booted up his computer on an American Airlines flight in October from New York to San Francisco. It was one of the first commercial flights to offer wireless Internet service. Within a couple minutes of reaching 10,000 feet, Farina was snooping the airwaves with the ability to see what his fellow pass
Nov 23, 2008 View in Crawl 4
slvrhawqNov 24, 2008
HACK THE PLANET!!!
ryosenNov 25, 2008
Let me get this straight. The guy goes out and performs "unsolicited security assessments"? You mean he goes around to companies and tries to break into their systems. Then, when he gets caught, he throws up some bulls**t excuse that he was just testing it and, oh, here's a free report and will you hire me now?I'm going to laugh my ass off when he ends up on the no-fly list.
grizNov 25, 2008
That's the point. Most people don't understand that they are vulnerable to snooping when connecting to an open access point. They just want to get e-mail and surf. Security is the last thing on their mind.
ladadadadaNov 25, 2008
Advertorial.Buried.
emberjohnNov 27, 2008
promoting hacking...naa..
puffenbargermeDec 2, 2008
Not too surprising that most people's computers are that easy to hack over wireless internet. If they can fix that security issue, Wi-Fi on airplanes will become the status quo within 5-10 years.