Author Topic: Neighbors stealing my Wi-Fi.  (Read 3703 times)

sentences also work really well in my experience

my old network name was my phone number. and random kids would call wanting to use the net and i was like NO FU!!!!

now its "house of bacon" cuz that amuses me.

This is going to be what my new password looks like, not this exactly but yea.

D=!WrUkEr3T7udre3hEPrE@w

This is going to be what my new password looks like, not this exactly but yea.

-snip-
Nice job. The neighbors might be forum lurkers and they saw this unless you tweak it.
« Last Edit: November 24, 2013, 11:38:54 PM by Theepicman »

If I were you, I'd change my password to dontstealmywififriend

This is going to be what my new password looks like, not this exactly but yea.
D=!WrUkEr3T7udre3hEPrE@w

Scroll up.

I somehow doubt that your neighbors launched a brute force attack against your router and discovered your 8 character password.



I really don't like this image because it pretty much works by making the reader feel stupid. This reader then believes that the image is entirely correct and follows its advice, even when it's bad.

The reason you've all been told to use complicated passwords with capital letters, numbers, and symbols is because it makes the attack exponentially more difficult to run.

Cracking the password "correcthorsebatterysample" would take forever to crack. However, this comes from the length. The word "correct" would only take 2 seconds to guess. "troubador" would take 22 minutes. "Troubador" would take 8 days, "Tr0ub4dor" would take 39 days, and "Tr0ub4dor&3" would take 4 thousand years to guess. It's easy to see how merely capitalizing letters and substituting out some letters for numbers makes a password virtually uncrackable.[1]

Anyway, my point is that this poster is correct but for the wrong reasons. It's not easier to guess passwords with tons of symbols, it's much, much harder. The reason "correcthorsebatterystaple" is a better password is purely because of length. "C0rr3cth0r$eb4tt3ryst4pl3" is a much, much more secure password.

no one is brute forcing a wifi password. that is impossible since a router wouldnt even allow the tries/per second required to do it in any reasonable time.

also why websites will lock up an account after 10 failed password tries, or lock you from logging in for an hour after 6 failed tries.

a program that needs to make a million guesses is rendered useless.
standard router software does similar things when this goes on.

its also unlikely anyone is guessing your password. unless a person just knows you very very well.

passwords are stolen because of keyloggers. thats is pretty much the only way it happens anymore.

/not 1997 anymore
« Last Edit: November 25, 2013, 12:34:30 AM by Bisjac »


i once lagged so badly because my neighbors were stealing our bandwidth, so i changed the password to butterybrown townrapist and renamed the network to 'steal this bitch'

needless to say i never had any issue since.

name your wifi (i think its called an ssid but i dont remember) something like "gtfo" or "FBI Surveillance Van 16" , etc.

Can't you just go to 192.168.01, find their computers in the user logs and block all access? I am not exactly a computer expert but from what I've seen that generally works pretty well.

yeah you can just block their computers

my main password for some of my primary accounts is 62 chars long, but some sites have a char limit. i just can't believe we're being told that adding alphanumerals to a really short password makes it good, and long passwords are for the most part frowned on. ughugugh

Just use a white list for mac adresses.