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Network Security Pen-Test
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Re: Wireless Audit Reports

Subject: Re: Wireless Audit Reports
Date: Thu, 30 Mar 2006 07:59:23 -0500
Michael,

Thanks. I guess, I could attach an Excel spreadsheet to the report listing the actual data I collected. All peer networks were examined for signal strength. I can say that anyone looking at the report will get cross-eyed as each section of each floor has between 20 and 70 networks (the average around 50 networks) and it really is too much data for anyone to glance at and gain a sense of. I guess I am trying to come up with a useful happy medium on what to report as there is so much data. The risks you mention are exactly the reasons why we are doing the wireless audit.

Thanks,

Matt

Michael Scheidell wrote:

You could report open networks, and laptops with peer connections.

The risk an open network poses is a user hoping on and bypassing the
corporate firewall, or worse, bridging the internal protected network on
a nic card with the external, unprotected network.

For laptops, or 'probes', someone on the outside cool put up a phony
access point and allow a laptop to join it.
Also, this usually indicates an access point at home. If these users
have access points at home, and use their corporate laptop to access it,
there could be a third angle of attack and exposure to corporate data,
either stored on the laptop, or maybe accessed via home to corporate lan
(through the wireless access point at home)



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