Jan 30, 2013

How-To Geek: New Security Hole Found in Wi-Fi Routers: Disable UPnP to Protect Yourself

How-To Geek
Tech Help from your Friendly How-To Geek
New Security Hole Found in Wi-Fi Routers: Disable UPnP to Protect Yourself
Jan 30th 2013, 19:13


A while back, we told you that UPnP on your router is not very secure, and you should probably disable it. Now a security research firm has found out that the problems are even worse than we originally thought.

There’s some 81 million unique IP addresses that expose UPnP functionality from the internet, and more than 6900 different devices are potentially vulnerable, at least, to being hacked from the outside. This means, theoretically, that your router could end up being hacked to forward ports from the outside world, which leaves you open to more hacking.

The simple answer is to disable UPnP on your wireless router. Since each router is different, you’ll need to login to your wireless router’s admin panel (use the manual to figure that out), and then find the UPnP setting. If you’ve forgotten the password, check out our article on how to access your router even if you forgot the password.

Security Flaws in Universal Plug and Play: Unplug, Don’t Play [SecurityStreet | Rapid7]

New Security Hole Found in Wi-Fi Routers: Disable UPnP to Protect Yourself
HTG Explains: Why You Can’t Get Infected Just By Opening an Email (and When You Can)
How to Troubleshoot Google Chrome Crashes


You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

No comments: