No. (more details below )
Free WiFi is great, because, well it's free! Unfortunately this comes with a "but". Here are some of the most common issues we see and how we recommend mitigating them. (The quick summary if you don't want to read all the below: if the public WiFi is from a reputable source and you want to do some casual surfing, you're probably fine, if you want to do some business stuff: use a VPN, and if you are not sure you can trust that WiFi, then don't (aka time to use your mobile hotspot)).
Cybercriminals are known to create fake hotspots to lure you (and your information) to their system
For example, which one of those are real and which ones are fake?
Potential mitigation tactics:
You went to a Marriott once and configured “Marriott Guest” as a valid WiFi to connect to, now your device will connect to anything called “Marriott Guest” it sees. Guess what: cybercriminals know that and will create fake hotspots (with the right names) to lure you (and your information) to their system when you are in other places.
Potential mitigation tactic:
Depending on how things are configured (usually for their convenience and not your security), it means everyone around you can see your Internet traffic. Yes, most of it is usually encrypted (the little lock in browser bar (https)), but they still see which websites you go to and of course see all the unencrypted traffic.
Potential mitigation tactic:
Vendors offer free WiFi for primarily 2 reasons:
As we established in 3, even if you go to encrypted websites, there is still a lot to learn about what you are doing while connected. In this scenario it applies even if the WiFi is not “Open” since they manage the keys of the kingdom.
Potential mitigation tactic:
For personal casual surfing:
For business use:
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And feel free to reach out if you have any questions!