The Wireless Broadband Alliance has published a Wi‑Fi Security Guidelines report aimed at tightening protections across public, enterprise and IoT networks, while improving roaming reliability.
The document lays out a standards-based framework covering device authentication, encryption, credential handling, signaling, and federation governance, addressing persistent threats such as rogue access points, credential theft, and signaling attacks that can compromise user privacy and operator operations.
At the core are mutual authentication and lifecycle protections for credentials, including secure OS key stores and hardened identity provider systems, designed to prevent evil‑twin attacks and passive sniffing while elevating Wi‑Fi protections toward cellular-grade levels.
The report goes beyond the radio link to urge operators to harden the entire access network—from physically securing access points and encrypting AP‑to‑controller links to designing secure backhaul and local breakout architectures.
WBA President and CEO Tiago Rodrigues framed the release as a move to align industry practice with user expectations, stating that proven standards and best practices can be applied consistently to deliver secure, privacy‑preserving, and interoperable Wi‑Fi experiences.
Industry partners quoted in the release emphasized operational benefits: Cameron Dunn of AT&T called the work essential for “trusted and seamless connectivity at scale,” while vendors including Boldyn Networks and NC‑Expert welcomed clearer governance and shared responsibility. The release also notes that AI tools assisted in the crafting of this report.