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Posts: 11,700 | Thanked: 10,045 times | Joined on Jun 2006 @ North Texas, USA
#1
I was playing with an N800 at work yesterday when I saw this new hotspot called Free Public WIFI. Oboy! I figured the city had quietly rolled it out, and gave it a shot. Unfortunately, I got a useless link-local address. I tried it in the parking lot after work and saw the spot was now unavailable, so I figured it was something our IT guys were bringing online (our current WiFi is firewalled) for visitors. Our guest intranet page was offline at the same time so it seemed to make sense.

Imagine my surprise when I brought it up to one of my colleagues this morning and he claimed it was some sort of virus. Intrigued, we googled it, and this article came up:

http://blogs.chron.com/techblog/arch...ublic_wif.html

It turns out that at some point someone created a legitimate Free Public WIFI node, and now this is being replicated ad hoc by Windows PC (likely laptops) all over the place. The author succinctly states:

It appears to be a manifestation of a feature of Windows that I wrote about earlier this year. When Windows connects to a network, it retains that network's name, or SSID, then broadcasts its as an ad hoc network, essentially inviting a connection. You can find more details here. Microsoft has said it will fix this in the next XP service pack; it's unclear if Windows Vista behaves this way.

So why do you see so many of these? My theory: It's viral, but not a virus!
Interesting!

Microsoft has a hotfix for the "feature", and it will be permanently rectified in the next service pack. I'm just amazed I never saw it mentioned here (I searched)!


Last edited by Texrat; 2007-08-01 at 17:20.
 

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