Windows management is best done through group policy, or at least most easily done through it. In fact, you can blacklist/whitelist wifi networks via group policy for Windows Vista+. The problem is that it's only available via AD group policy, not local group policy. At work I don't have Active Directory (but am hoping to by the end of the year), so I can't use this. Still, I'd like to block wifi networks on our wifi-enabled Windows computers. My desire for this came from the fact that someone in the office thought it'd be all right to take a laptop without permission for the purpose of working on public wifi during lunch. As a rule, laptops shouldn't be just taken without properly being checked out, but sometimes people just think something not-ok is OK. Luckily the person didn't end up using the laptop on who-knows-what public wifi network, but it was a close call and made me look into this.
I found out it was possible with a couple of ye olde netsh commands. I'll show them off on my crappy laptop with a dead battery that I never use because I hate laptops (maybe I'll go into that another time). Before firing them off on my laptop, Windows saw these wireless networks:
Donnerschlag is my wireless network, so let's make it so that's the only option for this laptop to connect to. Open up the command prompt as administrator:
Microsoft Windows [Version 6.1.7601] Copyright (c) 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. C:\windows\system32>netsh wlan add filter permission=denyall networktype=adhocFollowed by:
C:\windows\system32>netsh wlan add filter permission=denyall networktype=infrastructureThat will block all wireless connections, let's see what Windows says:
Looking good, but now I need to add my whitelisted connections:
C:\windows\system32>netsh wlan add filter permission=allow ssid=Donnerschlag networktype=infrastructureAaaaand now:
Success! Here's some other useful netsh commands for wireless networks:
Show current filters:
netsh wlan show filtersWhich returns something like:
Allow list on the system (group policy) ---------------------------------------You may want to blacklist just certain wireless networks, this is done by setting the ssid as appropriate and permission to blockAllow list on the system (user) ------------------------------- SSID: "Donnerschlag", Type: Infrastructure Block list on the system (group policy) --------------------------------------- Block list on the system (user) ------------------------------- SSID: "", Type: Adhoc SSID: "", Type: Infrastructure
netsh wlan add filter permission=block ssid=somewifinetwork networktype=infrastructureThere's also the ever-important delete filter command. syntax after
netsh wlan delete filter
needs to match the same syntax you used to add that filter.TechNet Library for Netsh wlan
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