It's generally frowned upon in the industry if you look for vulnerabilities in other people's networks and then ask them for money.
If you are serious about the industry, companies are going to look for past experience with wireless installs. How many previous nodes have you installed? Who are your references? What experience do you have that they will want to pay for? If your experience is just academic, they can FTFM for free. -- Eric Chamberlain, CISSP Campus Active Directory Architect Central Computing Services University of California, Berkeley http://calnetad.berkeley.edu > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:wireless- > [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of R. Simkins > Sent: Friday, March 21, 2003 5:08 AM > To: WLAN list > Subject: [BAWUG] WLAN Security Consultants > > Hello again! > > I was wondering if there is anyone who can tell me what is involved in > WLAN > security consultancy. Methods, approaches, etc. > > I am going to finish my degree in the UK this year and after that I am > dreaming of going into freelance WLAN security consultancy. > > Basically finding companies with open APs or weak security and asking them > to pay me to tell them how to secure it. > > Is anyone doing this or working for a company doing this? > > Which tools are best? WEPcrack, etc. > > Thanks > > Rob > -- > general wireless list, a bawug thing <http://www.bawug.org/> > [un]subscribe: http://lists.bawug.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless -- general wireless list, a bawug thing <http://www.bawug.org/> [un]subscribe: http://lists.bawug.org/mailman/listinfo/wireless
