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By Gerry Blackwell
Jim Gemmel was shopping in a Circuit City near D.C. recently, when he bumped into, as he puts it, "two gents from an unknown government agency." They attracted his attention a) because they were obviously feds, a species Gemmel knows well, and b) because they had a big shopping cart into which they were tossing wireless LAN NICs and access points. It piqued Gemmel's curiosity. As a senior signals analyst at CACI International Inc., a $600-million-a-year Arlington, VA systems integrator, he spends much of his time researching wireless networking technologies for federal government clients, including DoD agencies. Which means Gemmel knows exactly how secure WLANs are - i.e. not very. He decided to engage the gents in conversation. "I actually started preaching to them about security," he says a little sheepishly. "But they said they didn't care, they just wanted to get connectivity to wired services and they couldn't wait any longer for their systems' people." In light of increased fears about cyber terrorism post September 11, such a cavalier (if understandable) attitude in any government department, however far from the front lines, is a little scary. Which is, of course, part of Gemmel's point. But he also offers this bit of anecdotal evidence as his only knowledge of any trend in government towards adopting WLAN technology. In fact, there isn't a trend, he hopes - unless of course it's all under the radar screens of government systems administrators. Few of his clients are using 802.11b WLANs - at least officially. And the main reason is that CACI has advised against it for security reasons. In the first of this two-part series on WLAN security, we look at the major threats to 802.11 technology that make it, in Gemmel's opinion, more inappropriate than ever for government use. In Part II, he offers a laundry list of tips and tricks to make today's WLANs as secure as they can be. But even if you used all his techniques, he says, 802.11 WLANs still wouldn't be secure enough for many government applications. "I would say that for passing very sensitive information, it's probably not possible to make [an 802.11 network] secure. Or you couldn't make it 100-percent secure - but then I don't suppose a network that's 100-percent secure actually exists." Some of his clients, including DoD agencies and others - CACI also "services the intelligence community," Gemmel notes - would love it if there were a truly secure wireless network today. There has already been some public discussion of an "electronic battlefield solution," a portable outdoor WLAN that would offer superior bandwidth for battlefield data communications to current military RF systems. Harris Corp. (www.harris.com) and Intersil (www.intersil.com) have secure WLAN technology in development that will offer bullet-proof security, good enough even for this kind of application, Gemmel believes. "I would call [the Harris/Intersil product] a secure network, where you're actually protecting information as its passing across the link. It's as secure as one could get - as secure as any wired network," he says. In the meantime, the 802.11 gear that dominates the marketplace is a security nightmare, Gemmel says - pure Swiss cheese. The major threats?
Not a cheery thought around the Holiday season, perhaps, but worth keeping in mind. Next time: Gemmel's Boxing Day gift - WLAN security solutions that work, to a point.
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