"Cybercriminals are well aware and have developed techniques to steal information, identity or passwords and money from the users who use public or insecure Wi-Fi connections," Mohamed Djenane, Security Specialist at ESET Middle East said.
The worst thing to do is assume without verification that a Wi-Fi network is legitimate and run by a trusted establishment, he said.
It might be a decoy deployed by a criminal! As a general rule, users shouldn't connect to any network called, 'Free Wi-Fi'- it could well be a way of getting them to sign up for a newsletter or endure adverts, even if the hotspot isn't malicious, Djenane said.
"On-the-go access to the internet is all by unavoidable and the widespread Wi-Fi promised by smart cities will bring with it a wide range of benefits," Djenane said.
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"Knowing however that our lives today are heavily set in the digital domain, protecting our online presence must become an absolute priority. This might mean placing security over convenience and being smart, rather than sorry," he said.
Noting that using email apps on a phone can leak data as there are plenty of free apps that hackers can use to extract this information, Djenane said using a secure HTTPS website, or better still encryption, was definitely the safer route.
Typically, attacks on Wi-Fi hotspots are 'man-in-the- middle' attacks where an attacker is able to access the user's data as it travels. That means anything financial or corporate is out, he said.