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Inside the
Internet. | | How To Steal Wi-Fi And how
to keep the neighbors from stealing yours. By
Paul Boutin Posted Thursday, Nov. 18,
2004, at 2:16 PM PT
When I moved into a new
neighborhood last week, I expected the usual hassles. Then I found out I'd have
to wait more than a month for a DSL line. I started convulsing. If I don't have
Net access for even one day, I can't do my job. So, what was I supposed to do?
There's an Internet caf? on the next block, but they close early. I had no
choice?it was time to start sneaking on to my neighbors' home networks.
Every techie I know says that you shouldn't use other people's networks
without permission. Every techie I know does it anyway. If you're going to
steal?no, let's say borrow?your neighbor's Wi-Fi access, you might as
well do it right. Step one: Lose the guilt. The FCC told me that they don't know
of any federal or state laws that make it illegal to log on to an open network.
Using someone's connection to check your e-mail isn't like hacking into their
bank account. It's more like you're borrowing a cup of sugar. (Unless you hog
their bandwidth by watching lots of streaming video?that's like hijacking a
sugar truck.)
In the end, it's your neighbor's Internet service provider?not your
neighbor?who will pay for the added traffic, and the ISP has already factored a
small amount of line-sharing into their price plan. It is true that your surfing
could cause the folks next door to break their service contract?many broadband
providers do specifically forbid home customers from sharing a connection. But
let's deal with those abstract ethical issues later?you have important mail to
answer!
If you want to find a Wi-Fi network, don't start by looking on the
sidewalk for chalk marks. "Warchalking," a technique for writing symbols in public
places to alert neighbors to nearby wireless access points, is a cool concept
that's been undermined by the fact that no one has ever used
it. The best method to
find some free wireless is to treat your laptop like a cell phone. Since Wi-Fi
and cell phone signals travel on a similar radio frequency, the same tricks you
use for getting a better phone connection might work on your computer. Sit near
a window, since Wi-Fi signals travel better through glass than through solid
walls. Stay away from metal objects. Pay close attention to your laptop's
orientation?rotating your machine just a few degrees could help you pick up a
network that you couldn't see before. Raise your laptop over your head, put it
flat on the floor, tilt it sideways while leaning halfway out the window?get out
the divining rod if you have to. You might get a reputation for being some sick
laptop yoga freak, but isn't free Internet worth it?
If you live downtown or in a suburb where the houses are close together, a
few minutes of laptop gymnastics will probably reveal several Wi-Fi networks.
Certain names are a giveaway that a network probably won't be
password-protected. Look for "linksys," "default," "Wireless," "NETGEAR,"
"belkin54g," and "Apple Network 0273df." These are the default network names for
the most popular wireless routers. If a network owner hasn't taken the time to
change the default name, that's a good clue that they probably won't have a
password either. You should also look for signs of hacker culture. Since hackers
love giving away Net access, an all-lowercase name like "hackdojo" is most
likely an invitation to log on. On the other hand, a name in all caps is
typically a network under corporate lockdown.
If you do get prompted for a password, try "public"?that's the default on
many of Apple's AirPort units. You can also try common passwords like "admin,"
"password," and "1234"?or just check out this exhaustive list of default passwords. You should also
try using the name of the network in the password space. A generic password
could mean that the network's owner didn't have the sense to pick something less
obvious or that they've decided to welcome outsiders. But who cares? You're in.
And again, there's no specific law barring you from guessing the password, as
long as you don't crack an encrypted network and read other people's
transmissions.
You can tell that you've successfully joined a wireless network when your
laptop's IP address changes as it's assigned a local number by the network's
router. To watch it happen on a PC, keep the Network control panel in Windows
open; if you have an Apple notebook, look at the Network section of the System
Preferences program. (And if you're running Linux, I don't need to tell you
where to look.) Once your laptop has an IP address, your next hurdle is getting
DNS to work. DNS stands for Domain Name Service?it's what translates Internet
domains like "slate.com" into IP addresses like 207.46.141.216. On most
networks, DNS works automatically. But if you get a browser error like "Cannot
find server," go back to your network menus and configure your laptop to use a
public name server?144.162.120.230 in Dallas, for
instance.
Once DNS is working, you should be good to go. While you should be able to
surf the Web with no problems, you may have trouble sending mail from Outlook or
other desktop programs because of restrictions on e-mail routing that have been
set up to stop spammers. If you have problems, just use a Web-based mail service
like Hotmail or Gmail instead.
Keep in mind that the neighbors may not be thrilled that you're sharing the
line. One guy next door to my new building shut off his network the day after I
moved in, probably because he got spooked by all those blinking LEDs on his
router. Even neighbors who are happy to share may see you in a different light
if they check their router's URL logs and find a few hundred hits on porn sites.
While your browsing will show up under an anonymous address, the short range of
Wi-Fi means that they'll at least be able to figure out that one of the laptop
owners within 100 feet of their living room is a stuffed animal
fetishist. (As a San Franciscan, I need to point out that a stuffed animal
fetish is perfectly normal. It's your neighbors who have the problem.)
Since everyone isn't as eager to share their network as I am, it's only fair
to explain that there's an incredibly easy way to keep neighbors and drive-by
geeks off your network. All you have to do is set a password that isn't as
obvious as "1234." There's an eye-glazing list of Wi-Fi security measures you can implement to block overachieving
Russian teens from monitoring your keystrokes, but in real life the only people
sniffing your wireless signal are jerks like me who need a place to log on until
the phone company wires the apartment. An unguessable password sends as clear a
message as a shot of Mace: Go find a Starbucks, creep.
Paul Boutin is a Silicon Valley writer who spent
15 years as a software engineer and manager.
Illustration by Mark Alan
Stamaty.
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More webhead
How To Steal Wi-Fi And how to keep
the neighbors from stealing yours. posted Nov. 18, 2004 Paul
Boutin
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company. posted Nov. 12, 2004 Paul Boutin
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they will soon. posted Oct. 19, 2004 Paul Boutin
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Screen of Death Why your computer still
crashes. posted Sept. 30, 2004 Paul Boutin
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free. posted Sept. 14, 2004 Paul Boutin
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