When we are unable to change a situation, We are challenged to change ourselves.

Mapping Minds believes in core values of educational system to impart the required cultural values for today’s work environment along with the selected stream of any training opted by the aspired IT professional.

Training Programs

Mapping Minds training programs facilitate
corporate and students build proactive and high performance teams, which translate their corporate vision into reality.

  • Syllabus coverage as per Industry standards
  • Classroom experience with live demos and case studies
  • Module specific comprehensive coverage of interview questions
  • Assistance provided from professional experts
  • Real-time solutions management
 



News and Events

News and Events » Security
Bookmark and Share

Secure your WiFi connection or terrorists may use it

December 14, 2010  |  Views : 168
NEW DELHI: A Navi Mumbai disc jockey was baffled and shocked when police came to his house on Tuesday night asking him about an Indian Mujahideen e-mail claiming responsibility for Varanasi blast.

The e-mail was sent by Akhil Talreja's unsecured WiFi connection, minutes after the blast. Later, it was found that his connection, which did not require a password, was hacked into by IM terrorists and used for the purpose.

Akhil and his brother Nikhil were detained and questioned for hours.

According to cyber experts, one must secure his or her connection by keeping a password or any hacker can use it for wrong purpose, putting the subscriber in trouble.

"Terrorists do not have much time to crack passwords because security agencies immediately start investigating the terror attacks. So they use WiFi connections which are available to them easily," Mumbai-based cyber expert Ashish Sharma told PTI 'Bhasha'.

He said laptops and many phones are WiFi enabled and if terrorists detect any unsecured connection, not requiring a password, they might send terror message by a recently procured e-mail ID and then leave the spot immediately.