Airports, coffee shops, and campuses everywhere became a little more dangerous this week when Wi-Fi hotspots were inundated with curious “hackers” who downloaded the Firesheep plug-in to take a peek at their neighbors Internet habits.
The downloadable Firefox extension created by Seattle Web developer Eric Butler and released to the public this week has been a hit with novice hackers everywhere. While Firesheep does allow users to hijack someone else’s Internet session, it doesn’t give them access to passwords or other account information that a person isn’t viewing.
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But just as swiftly as the annoyingly easy-to-use extension was unleashed on Wi-Fi connections everywhere, a couple of quick fixes have been introduced. Here is how you can avoid inadvertently exposing your private information through Firesheep.
Use a VPN
Besides the very obvious resource of avoiding public Wi-Fi networks altogether, one option is to use a virtual private network (VPN) when connecting. A VPN will act like a guard when using Wi-Fi and encrypts all of your information circulating between you and the Web. It isn’t free, however, and runs around $5 to $10 a month. There are varying opinions on how much using a VPN protects users.
Download a Firefox plug-in
If that’s not enough security or if you aren’t concerned enough to pay a subscription rate, Firefox itself wants to offer a solution to its own problem. The browser offers two different, free plug-ins that encrypt your information when visit specific sites. HTTPS-Everywhere and Force-TLS prevent snooping on particularly personal sites, like Facebook, Twitter, and PayPal.Force-TLS lets you design the list of sites you’d like protected and HTTPS-Everywhere comes with its own. If you use a different browser, however, you’re out of luck: These are available only through Firefox, but if you care about a private net session it’s worth it to use Firefox momentarily.









