Recently, I found myself with a layover between mediation clients whom I was serving at their sites. I had about an hour and a whole lot of office admin work piling up, so I bought myself a cup of coffee, parked my car in downtown Keene, NH, and opened up my laptop. I was happily making use of this downtime when my computer made that little sound it makes when a new email has been delivered. Uh oh, I thought, I’m on someone else’s unprotected wireless network. I had forgotten to disable my computer’s internal network card.
My computer automatically searches for available networks when I power up unless I tell it not to. I looked at all the office buildings around me. Who’s network am I on, I wondered, and why haven’t they protected it in the midddle of downtown Keene? My very next thought was, I’ve got to get off of it now. I was simultaneously thinking about a recent news item on wardriving and moving my fingers to turn off my wireless device when a police car pulled up in front of me. I positively froze. I’m sure my mouth must have been hanging open in surprise. All I could think was, Whoa, they’re getting good here in Keene. And how am I going to explain that it was an innocent accident?
It was a meter maid and she couldn’t have cared less about me. I sat in my car and laughed hysterically. The woman who pulled up in the parking space next to mine looked at me as though she was considering a call to the local hospital.
If you have a wireless (or wi-fi) network in your home or office and you don’t know what wardriving is, I urge you to educate yourself now. Then take a look at this site for advice about how to protect your network and the computers on it from someone pulling up on a street near you and helping themselves to your hard drive contents: Boost Your Wi-fi Security.

Making Mediation Your Day Job by Tammy Lenski is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at MakingMediationYourDayJob.com.
Nice posting with great links. We just put one up that provides tips and tricks including free tools one can use to avoid getting into trouble whilst using a public hotspot to connect to the internet. It also includes a step-by-step guide: Using a Wi-Fi hotspot securely ==> http://casescontact.org/tips/210020