Our residence hall policy and campus acceptable use policy specify that students are not allowed to connect routers, switches, or access points to the wired network, or operate independent wireless access points in campus facilities. Our NAC and switches are able to handle any that get plugged into wired drops. We don't have too many wireless issues caused by rogue APs, but when we detect an issue related to one, we locate them rather than mitigate them. We haven't run into one where the student was really trying to hide an AP, so we can usually localize it to a room or two, and then residential life finds them during one of their room inspections. Usually the student is just ignorant of the policy violation, and packs the device away. We haven't had any really rebellious students that insisted on bringing the device back online at a later time.
David Hales Network Systems Administrator Information Technology Services 1010 N. Peachtree Clement Hall 117 Cookeville, TN 38505 P 931-372-3983 F 931-372-6130 E dha...@tntech.edu<mailto:dha...@tntech.edu> www.tntech.edu/its<http://www.tntech.edu/its> [Tennessee Tech Logo]<https://www.tntech.edu/> [TTU Facebook] <https://www.facebook.com/tennesseetech/> [TTU Twitter] <https://twitter.com/tennesseetech> [TTU Instagram] <https://www.instagram.com/tntechuniversity/> [TTU Youtube] <https://www.youtube.com/user/ttunews> [TTU Pintrest] <https://www.pinterest.com/tennesseetech/> From: The EDUCAUSE Wireless Issues Constituent Group Listserv [mailto:WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU] On Behalf Of Davis, Steve Sent: Thursday, October 19, 2017 9:56 AM To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU Subject: [WIRELESS-LAN] Wireless printers and other devices in residence halls I wanted to get an idea how everyone is handling students bringing in all types of wireless devices, which are basically access points. We have so many printers, TVs, Roku devices, game systems and who knows what else out there in the student rooms and these devices are causing issues with our campus wireless network. Do you allow these devices on your network? If not, how do you prevent the students from having them? I have Cisco wireless controllers where I can block rogue APs but that keeps the APs which are containing the rogue AP from servicing the clients and I don't have dense enough coverage to be able to do this for every rogue device. Thanks in advance -Steve Steve Davis | Network Manager Department of Technology Infrastructure Lock Haven University 519 Robinson Hall 401 North Fairview Street, Lock Haven, PA 17745 Phone: 570-484-2290 | sda...@lockhaven.edu<mailto:sda...@lockhaven.edu> | www.lockhaven.edu<http://www.lockhaven.edu/> Connect with us: Facebook<https://www.facebook.com/LockHavenUniv/> | Twitter<https://twitter.com/LockHavenUniv> | YouTube<https://www.youtube.com/user/LHU1870> ********** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/discuss. ********** Participation and subscription information for this EDUCAUSE Constituent Group discussion list can be found at http://www.educause.edu/discuss.