A notice posted online showed an email to staff confirming that some of them had been affected by the incident and that the public WiFi service would be turned off as a precautionary measure for the time being.
“The Parliament has been subject for a
man-in-the-middle attack, where a hacker has captured the communication
between private smartphones and the public WiFi of the Parliament
(EP-EXT Network),” the note read.
“Some individual mailboxes have been
compromised. All concerned users have already been contacted and asked
to change their password.
“As a precaution, the Parliament has therefore
decided to switch off the public WiFi network until further notice, and
we invite you to contact the ITEC Service Desk [IT Desk] in order to
install an EP software certificate on all the devices that you use to
access the EP IT systems (email, etc).”
Staff were also advised to change their
passwords and to avoid using unknown public WiFi in other destinations
such as train stations or airports.
"On the medium term the Parliament will take
additional measures to further secure the communication to the
Parliament,” it added.
The EP confirmed to V3 that the public
WiFi network was still down at present: "Because of this incident,
Parliament has decided to close the public WiFi network until further
notice," a spokesperson said.
The incident underlines the growing issues
affecting public WiFi services and the security risks they pose. Many
high street stores are starting to offer free WiFi services in order to
meet customers' needs and try to allow them to access more content about
products on their devices.
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