Bournemouth Hotel
Accommodation, Bed and Breakfast Bournemouth, Gervis Court Hotel one of the fine
hotels in Bournemouth
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Here at the Gervis Court Hotel Bournemouth we offer WiFi Internet access for our guests. It is offered on an "own risk basis. However we give no guarantees regarding security on the Internet |
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Short for wireless fidelity and is meant to be used generically when
referring of any type of 802.11 network, whether 802.11b, 802.11a,
dual-band, etc. The term is promulgated by the Wi-Fi Alliance. Any products
tested and approved as "Wi-Fi Certified" (a registered trademark) by the
Wi-Fi Alliance are certified as interoperable with each other, even if they
are from different manufacturers. A user with a "Wi-Fi Certified" product
can use any brand of access point with any other brand of client hardware
that also is certified. Typically, however, any Wi-Fi product using the same
radio frequency (for example, 2.4GHz for 802.11b or 11g, 5GHz for 802.11a)
will work with any other, even if not "Wi-Fi Certified." Formerly, the term "Wi-Fi" was used only in place of the 2.4GHz 802.11b standard, in the same way that "Ethernet" is used in place of IEEE 802.3. The Alliance expanded the generic use of the term in an attempt to stop confusion about wireless LAN interoperability. Also see the Wireless LAN Standards chart in the Quick Reference section of Webopedia Home improvement giant Lowe's found this out the hard way, when
a Wi-Fi network it was using to transmit credit card and other data from
cashiers to a central network was broken into by three college-age men
sitting the parking lot of the Southfield, Michigan store. Not only did they
capture credit card information, but they actually altered the software code
used by Lowe's to process credit cards, and gained access to computers in
six other stores as far away as Long Beach, California. Only after Lowe's
discovered the intrusion at its headquarters in North Carolina did it call
the FBI, which then found the men in the parking lot, followed them home,
and arrested them. The men later admitted they had discovered the
unprotected network while wardriving earlier in the year. |
And while individual home networks may not be quite as attractive to wireless hackers, do you really want your neighbour stealing your bandwidth, or passersby snooping around your hard disk? Just over a year ago, surveys revealed that most public and private Wi-Fi networks used no encryption at all, meaning that anyone with a laptop and Wi-Fi card could intercept and read data packets being sent or received by legitimate users. This could happen even without actually connecting to the wireless router. All that is needed is the ability to "sniff" the airwaves, a rudimentary function offered by dozens of easily downloadable utilities, such as those used by "wardrivers." (Wardrivers are those who wander the streets with Wi-Fi gear looking for networks to join -- most are hobbyists or simple bandwidth seekers, but some are malicious. Even if you aren't worried about your home network, and don't keep any
valuable data on your hard drive, you should still be concerned about
bandwidth hijackers. In perhaps the most shocking Wi-Fi crime to date, a man
using a laptop in a moving car was found by Toronto police naked from the
waist down and downloading child pornography thanks to open Wi-Fi nets in a
residential neighbourhood. Police only stopped him because he was going the
wrong way down a one-way street. Worse, if such downloads are traced back to
your IP address, you could be charged with possession of pornography
yourself. |
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Gervis Court Hotel 38 Gervis Road East Cliffe Bournemouth Dorset BH1 3DH Tel... 01202 556871 Fax... 01202 467066