More than 10,000 eduroam hotspots are available at universities, research centres, academies, many schools, and other research and education institutions in more than 100 territories around the world. As eduroam grows, more and more hotspots are appearing in additional places such as libraries, museums and public spaces such as railway stations and coffee shops.


 With eduroam installed on your laptop, mobile phone or other device there's no need to request special accounts or borrow other people's IDs - just activate your device and you should be online.


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eduroam's secure and privacy-preserving technology means that there is no need to enter usernames and passwords through insecure web browser forms. Your device will identify a valid eduroam access point and log-in automatically. Your password is never shared with any of the access points.

eduroam (education roaming) is a secure, worldwide wireless network access system developed for the international research and education community. IU students, faculty, and staff can connect to eduroam at member institutions using your full IU email address and passphrase.

eduroam is managed by the Global eduroam Governance Committee, which is made up of several regional administrative entities. IU is a member of eduroam-US. The Big Ten Academic Alliance, a consortium of higher education institutions that includes Big Ten universities and the University of Chicago, has recommended using eduroam as the official mechanism for cross-member wireless network access.

eduroam is a secure, world-wide roaming access service. It allows you to gain secure WiFi access using your full University of Minnesota email address and password when visiting other participating institutions.

Users must sign on to eduroam (using their full University of Minnesota email address and password) on their home campus before traveling to other campuses to get their security certificate enabled.

Wi-Fi connectivity is generally available throughout most buildings on campus as well as in UC Berkeley-affiliated buildings located off-site. For the most stable and secure connection, eduroam is the primary Wi-Fi service providing students, faculty, and staff access to the campus network (be sure to drop other Wi-Fi options in your list). Devices incompatible with eduroam can use the Berkeley-IoT Wi-Fi network. Visitors who do not have eduroam access can use Berkeley-Visitor for basic internet access. View the comparison chart below to see which Wi-Fi option is best for you.

The recommended Wi-Fi service to use while on campus is eduroam. Available in almost all buildings across UC Berkeley, eduroam is the most stable and secure, authenticated service providing network access on campus and at many institutions around the world. Learn more

Please note eduroam by itself is not appropriate for Protection Level 3 and 4 data. Devices requiring access to, or transmission of, P3 and P4 data must use the bSecure Remote Access Service (GlobalProtect) in addition to eduroam to ensure compliance with data protection requirements.

In some countries, Internet access via eduroam is also available at other locations than the participating institutions, e.g. in libraries, public buildings, railway stations, city centres and airports.[1][2]

The eduroam initiative started in 2002 when during the preparations for the creation of TERENA's task force TF-Mobility, Klaas Wierenga of SURFnet shared the idea of combining a RADIUS-based infrastructure with IEEE 802.1X technology to provide roaming network access across research and education networks.[3] Initially, the service was joined by institutions in the Netherlands, Germany, Finland, Portugal, Croatia and the United Kingdom.[4] Later, other NRENs in Europe embraced the idea and started joining the infrastructure, which was then called eduroam.[5] Since 2004, the European Union co-funded further research and development work related to the eduroam service through the GN2[6] and GN3[7] projects.[8] From September 2007, the European Union also funded through these projects the continued operation and maintenance of the eduroam service at the European level.[9]

The first non-European country to join eduroam was Australia, in December 2004.[10] In Canada, eduroam started as an initiative of the University of British Columbia, which was later taken over by CANARIE as a service of its Canadian Access Federation.[11] In the United States, eduroam was initially a pilot project between the National Science Foundation and the University of Tennessee (UTK). In 2012, Internet2 announced the addition of eduroam to its NET+ service offerings.[12] AnyRoam LLC, a private company, was formed by former UTK staff to serve as an Internet2 active corporate member administering the top-level servers.

The eduroam service uses IEEE 802.1X as the authentication method and a hierarchical system of RADIUS servers.[13] The hierarchy consists of RADIUS servers at the participating institutions, national RADIUS servers run by the National Roaming Operators, and regional top-level RADIUS servers for individual world regions. When a user visits a remote institution, the user's mobile device presents their credentials to the local RADIUS server. That RADIUS server discovers that it is not responsible for the realm of the user's home institution and proxies the access request to the national RADIUS server. If the visited institution is in a different country than the home institution, the request is in turn proxied to the regional top-level RADIUS server, and then to the national RADIUS server of the user's home country. That national server forwards the credentials to the home institution, where they are verified. The 'acknowledge' travels back over the proxy-hierarchy to the visited institution and the user is granted access.

A complication arises if the user's home institution does not use a two-letter country-code top-level domain as part of its realm, but a generic top-level domain such as .edu or .org. By inspection of such realms, it is not possible to determine which national RADIUS server the request should be routed to. Such domains will thus, by default, fail to work in international roaming. The workaround for this problem involves the creation of exceptions in the international RADIUS request routing tables; however, this workaround does not scale as the number of exception entries grows. Several solutions have been proposed to eliminate this workaround in the future, the most promising of which is RADIUS over TLS with Dynamic Discovery, which does not rely on static routing tables inside a RADIUS server configuration to route requests to their proper destination.[14] Instead, the participating institution adds one single DNS resource record to its own domain's DNS zone, which states by which server eduroam authentication for the domain is handled.[citation needed]

GANT has established a lightweight global governance structure.[15] Recognising the large variety in the organisation and funding of research and education (networking) in different countries and regions, rules imposed on the operations of eduroam are limited to technical and administrative requirements that are necessary to ensure the smooth and secure operations of eduroam worldwide. Moreover, the eduroam operators have the leading role in creating and maintaining the rules of the global eduroam governance.

eduroam is available at selected locations in countries with a National Roaming Operator that has signed the eduroam Compliance Statement.[16] Those sixty-seven countries are listed below. In addition, there may be pilot deployments in countries that are in the process of joining eduroam.

The NRENs that are members of the consortium of the GN3 project[7] have joined the European eduroam confederation by signing the confederation's policy[17] that requires its members to comply with a set of technical and organisational requirements, which are more specific than those in the global eduroam Compliance Statement.

In addition, three NRENs that are associate members of the consortium of the GN3 project without voting rights joined the European eduroam confederation; they represent Belarus (UIIP), Moldova (RENAM) and Russia (Joint Supercomputer Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences).

Hello, This is my first time asking a question or even speaking on the reddit but i have a question. How do we use wifi with certificates like eduroam. I have tried to use this wifi multiple times with no avail. If any one knows how to solve this problem it will be much appreciated!

This really depends on your environment and work flow. Over half of our macs are bounded to Active Directory. The benefit of having our eduroam profile as computer level is that there is a network connection at the login screen for any new user to log on to a multi-user mac such as lab machines. Also if a user has changed their password they can still log in since it is doing the AD check right at login vs having the user log in with their old password > then get net connection > and then the password sync happens at next login. You also have the benefit of having the comp level profile on an admin account if there is one.

I've downloaded the our eduroam profile from Created a new configuration profile by just clicking upload and selecting the downloaded profile. I assign it to an iPad to install via self service but it fails when I go to Self Service to install. Any idea of what I am missing? Ughhh. though it would be this easy.


It does say that the profile is read only because it is signed but I think that is supposed to be.

Be aware though that when using the general Internet at an eduroam hotspot, the local site security measures at that hotspot will apply to you as well. For example, the firewall settings at the visited place may be different from those you are used to at home, and as a guest you may have access to fewer services on the Internet than you have at home. ff782bc1db

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