Posted: 7/22/2010 3:17:35 PM EDT
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I live in an apt, and I just upgraded my router from G to N. I had to pick a name for my router, and being that I live around some "shady characters", I named my router "Fuck_Obama" |
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Quoted: I live in an apt, and I just upgraded my router from G to N. I had to pick a name for my router, and being that I live around some "shady characters", I named my router "Fuck_Obama" Lol, that is great. Put a good password on there. http://www.tomsguide.com/us/Router-Exploit-Linksys-WRT54G,news-7547.html |
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Quoted: Quoted: I live in an apt, and I just upgraded my router from G to N. I had to pick a name for my router, and being that I live around some "shady characters", I named my router "Fuck_Obama" Lol, that is great. Put a good password on there. http://www.tomsguide.com/us/Router-Exploit-Linksys-WRT54G,news-7547.html I do have a good password for the network. The router I was temporarily using was one I bought used, and didn't have the pw for. It was unsecured, so I replaced it quickly, and now I'm glad to get my network plugged up. |
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I normally put an odd South Park reference as the SSID, and the password is generally relevant to the SSID. If they can figure it out, they can use it till I change it. ![]() I've used TexasChiliBowl, ChickenPotPie, MahAuthoritah, and HasNoSouls. Right now I'm running "ScottMalkinson".
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Quoted: http://i138.photobucket.com/albums/q267/joecbr/ar15/001-5.jpg Good choice on your network name. Oh Shit! I hope that's your wireless, and not mine! ETA: if that's my network, and you can see it, come on up! Beer's on me! |
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Just a heads up, all those WiFi networks are logged via SSID into a national system. For example, iPhones use that network to triangulate GPS coordinates in addition to cell towers. So somewhere there is a GPS location attached to your WiFi network's name. So, what's the lat/long for "Linksys" or "Default"? |
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Just a heads up, all those WiFi networks are logged via SSID into a national system. For example, iPhones use that network to triangulate GPS coordinates in addition to cell towers. So somewhere there is a GPS location attached to your WiFi network's name. You may want to loosen your tinfoil a little. |
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Mine is HONEYPOT, and is unsecured for a reason. I figure this gives me free license to take advantage of all those who partake of my free internets. I was just thinking "Man, that would be a cool way to do a honeypot". Any tips on setting one up? AP + Catalyst switch & port spanning (or just use a hub, if you can still find one) + Wireshark = win. It's getting harder to have fun, now that popular sites are forcing you to use SSL for logins. |
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http://i138.photobucket.com/albums/q267/joecbr/ar15/001-5.jpg Good choice on your network name. Oh Shit! I hope that's your wireless, and not mine! ETA: if that's my network, and you can see it, come on up! Beer's on me! It's mine, I like to fuck with the obama supporters in my apt. complex. |
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I have a linux honeypot, using runlevel 4 that initates a Kismet trace for every command...and everything in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin., /usr/sbin, etc is aliased in runlevel 4 to an script that runs Kismet, send me an e-mail, and then changes the prompt to read root@honeypot>
I've had hours of fun with that! |
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I have a linux honeypot, using runlevel 4 that initates a Kismet trace for every command...and everything in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin., /usr/sbin, etc is aliased in runlevel 4 to an script that runs Kismet, send me an e-mail, and then changes the prompt to read root@honeypot> I've had hours of fun with that! I like the cut of your jib. |
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Quoted: I normally put an odd South Park reference as the SSID, and the password is generally relevant to the SSID. If they can figure it out, they can use it till I change it. ![]() I've used TexasChiliBowl, ChickenPotPie, MahAuthoritah, and HasNoSouls. Right now I'm running "ScottMalkinson". Password diabetes? |
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Just a heads up, all those WiFi networks are logged via SSID into a national system. For example, iPhones use that network to triangulate GPS coordinates in addition to cell towers. So somewhere there is a GPS location attached to your WiFi network's name. You may want to loosen your tinfoil a little. Can you explain the tinfoil comment? That's the tip of the iceberg. The google streetview vehicles also stored computer MAC addresses in IIRC in Germany which raises the question, did they do it here? If so, every wireless network and connected device has an associated GPS coordinate. When police seize computers, they are not just looking to see if you have bad kiddie pics. They are taking your site visit tracks to Google, Yahoo et al. with a subpoena and looking at everything you have done online, everything you have ever searched, and even when you aren't going through a search engine on the front end, there are traces on the back end from the sites you visit. Every trace ever left by a marketing tracker (of which there are dozens) or traffic analyzers (ever hear of Google Analytics?)is now linked to all activity on every associated client site. Never mind your ISP logs. Somewhere around 100% of your internet footprints going back years have been stored elsewhere around the internet and almost certainly will be recoverable in a pro-forma investigation. It's like a mind-reader that works through tinfoil. It won't usually show up in court but it will certainly guide the investigation to things that might. It isn't just your IP address which changes frequently, or the cookies you delete, or your MAC address which you might change, or use/migrate to different devices. They are all associated through time as they are collected, sometimes at a much later date as a data point arrives which ties two disparate tracks together. Remember when the big ISP's and search engines were fighting disclosure because we would be "shocked" at how much data they had about us? You were saying? I recycled all my tinfoil to buy a smartphone on which Google "backs up" my data so I guess I'm fresh out, btw. |
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I have mine set up to not broadcast the SSID, and have it mac-addy filtered. It's still visible in a packet trace, and mac-addresses can be spoofed. I hope you're doing more than that. Not broadcasting the SSID doesn't really do jack shit except for not providing an invitation. The best thing a home user can do is use WPA2/AES PSK. I run an old WRT54G with DDWRT firrmware. |
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I have a linux honeypot, using runlevel 4 that initates a Kismet trace for every command...and everything in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin., /usr/sbin, etc is aliased in runlevel 4 to an script that runs Kismet, send me an e-mail, and then changes the prompt to read root@honeypot> I've had hours of fun with that! English Motherfucker. Do you speak it? I wish I could be a slueth like you. |
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Quoted: Quoted: I have a linux honeypot, using runlevel 4 that initates a Kismet trace for every command...and everything in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin., /usr/sbin, etc is aliased in runlevel 4 to an script that runs Kismet, send me an e-mail, and then changes the prompt to read root@honeypot> I've had hours of fun with that! English Motherfucker. Do you speak it? I wish I could be a slueth like you. I leave mine open so others can use it. No reason to set up a honeypot unprovoked, god damn... |
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Just a heads up, all those WiFi networks are logged via SSID into a national system. For example, iPhones use that network to triangulate GPS coordinates in addition to cell towers. So somewhere there is a GPS location attached to your WiFi network's name. You may want to loosen your tinfoil a little. Read up on it. No tinfoil needed. He speaks the truth |
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I have a linux honeypot, using runlevel 4 that initates a Kismet trace for every command...and everything in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin., /usr/sbin, etc is aliased in runlevel 4 to an script that runs Kismet, send me an e-mail, and then changes the prompt to read root@honeypot> I've had hours of fun with that! English Motherfucker. Do you speak it? I wish I could be a slueth like you. I leave mine open so others can use it. No reason to set up a honeypot unprovoked, god damn... OK WTF is a honeypot??? |
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Quoted: Mine is HONEYPOT, and is unsecured for a reason. I figure this gives me free license to take advantage of all those who partake of my free internets. By doing what? Logging information sent and received? I thought a honeypot was designed to distract attackers from real networks and information. So how does that tie in with taking advantage of those that leech your bandwidth? |



