https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL1607/S00018/norton-wi-fi-privacy-review.htm
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Norton Wi-Fi Privacy review |
Symantec wants you to know public Wi-Fi is risky — see below. This is not news. But the company says it has your back with an app to keep you safe. Norton WiFi Privacy comes in versions for Android and iOS.
Both are free downloads. You get a one week trial at no charge. After that, it’s NZ$45 for a year's subscription.
Norton say the app encrypts your data then sends it through a virtual private network or VPN.
Experts agree this combination is a good first-line defence against Wi-Fi dark arts.
Although if you're worried, you might be better off avoiding free Wi-Fi. After all, it's not so free if you need to spend $45 a year to use it.
It may not stop determined, expert crooks, or state sponsored agencies, but Norton Wi-Fi Privacy will keep you safe from opportunistic, everyday criminals.
The app also includes
links to a free built-in ad blocker and a free password
manager. At the time of writing the ad blocker is not
available to New Zealanders. Symantec says it may be added
later. The password manager is part of the local
deal.
We’ll have to take Norton’s word on this. There is no easy way to check the app encrypts data before it leaves the phone.
Whether
bank-grade encryption is necessary or valuable to
the ordinary user is debatable. It sounds good
though.
Norton is a well-known brand. Symantec has much to lose if anyone found it was cheating.
If Symantec was
cheating, you’d soon know. Security experts pull
Norton’s technology apart looking for flaws all the time.
They
found whoppers earlier this year.
In simple language a VPN is a secure tunnel through the internet from your device to a server. The tunnel’s other end can be anywhere.
Businesses use VPNs to keep traffic private. It’s not impossible to snoop on VPN traffic, but it’s hard. There’s so much low-hanging fruit that criminals can do better elsewhere.
Consumers
use VPNs to hide where they are coming from and what they
are up to. So they can watch geo-locked video or browse
geo-locked websites. And a VPN means ISPs and others can’t
see if you’re downloading pirated material.
While VPNs are useful, they come with strings attached. A VPN will slow your connection. There are few, if any, phone apps where this matters. Nevertheless, keep it in mind.
To test how much Norton's VPN slows traffic I ran Speedtest on my phone with and without the Norton VPN. I did this in a handful of locations on Auckland’s North Shore. The tests used 3G and 4G cellular, home Wi-Fi and a Spark Wi-Fi hotspot.
Norton’s VPN allows you to choose from one of 14 international destinations. There’s an automatic mode as well. In Auckland it chooses the Sydney region by default. If you want another you can pick one using the manual settings.
The VPN means you can make it look
as if your phone is calling from the US, Germany or anywhere
else.
You can check where your VPN connects to the rest of the internet by using ipaddress.com. During the test this confirmed the UK address as being in the City of London and belonging to Digital Ocean.
Norton Wi-Fi Privacy keeps
personal or business information safe from prying eyes. It
is also a handy way of watching geo-blocked streaming video.
During testing I used it to see Euro 2016 football on UK
television channels. It worked well and maybe worth buying
for this as much as for the privacy.
Post-paid mobile phone contracts in New Zealand include cellular data. It’s harder for criminals to tap into 4G mobile than intercept public Wi-Fi traffic.
So, instead of worrying about Wi-Fi snoops, consider making more use of cellular data. It is simpler and maybe cheaper. You could spend the $45 Norton subscription on buying more mobile data.
If you make regular video calls or run
data-heavy apps, Norton WiFi Privacy makes more
sense.
Yet Norton has packaged this to make it easy for non-experts. The language and jargon of network security is often enough to scare everyday users off.
At NZ$45 a year it is expensive, but then it is less than many commercial VPNs charge for a subscription. Norton’s app is a less trouble and some will feel comforted by the brand name.
Less likeable is Norton’s mean one device licence. If, like me, you run a phone and a tablet, Norton would like you to pay twice for the app. Of course you could tether that second device to your phone, but that’s not the point here.
One extra thing to think about. Norton WiFi Privacy
will go a long way to protect you, but don't fall into the
trap of thinking it's all you need to stay safe on public
networks. Whether you have the software installed or not,
you need to keep your wits about you when using public
services.
Crooks can sniff traffic on the network. They can intercept email, read direct messages, even listen in on VoIP conversations.
They can steal or copy your cookies then log-in to sites with your identity. If you use unencrypted sites, they can even get your passwords and log-ins. It’s possible to watch your online banking sessions and take your money.
Another threat is the Man-in-the-Middle attack. This can load malicious code on your devices or servers. The crooks might be looking for a way into organisational systems.
This article by Maurits Martijn has more gory detail.
While all this sounds scary, you can cut the risks by using HTTPS instead of HTTP to log-on to sites. If you use encrypted connections and verify sites using certificate, you remove most of the remaining risk.
Keep all of this in mind. Knowing the risks is the first step to staying safe.
Norton Wi-Fi Privacy review was first posted at billbennett.co.nz