On Fri, 2012-09-21 at 12:42 -0500, Larry Finger wrote:
> On 09/21/2012 12:14 PM, Marius Kotsbak wrote:
> >
> > On Sep 20, 2012 11:38 PM, "Petric Frank" <[email protected] 
> > <mailto:[email protected]>>
> > wrote:
> >  > In fact (here in Germany) german telecom delivered WLAN-routers which 
> > all have
> >  > preset the same (E)SSID. Shall i go to every household (even if i can 
> > locate
> >  > them) in my environment to tell them to change their SSID ?
> >
> > That is bad (but it seems like Linksys routers are the same), but you 
> > should be
> > able to change the SSID of the AP you use.
> 
> As far as I know, all routers from a given manufacturer come from the factory 
> with the same ESSID and the same router password. It certainly is true for 
> Netgear and Linksys, As Marius says, you should change the ESSID, and it is 
> very 
> important to change the password. If you don't, you may find that someone 
> else 
> will lock you out of your AP/router, and you will need to learn where the 
> reset 
> button is located. The default ESSID is a clue that the password might not 
> have 
> been changed.

We've actually had code in NM for quite a long time that, if you click
on a new network with any of the names:

        "linksys",
        "linksys-a",
        "linksys-g",
        "default",
        "belkin54g",
        "NETGEAR",
        "o2DSL",
        "WLAN",
        "ALICE-WLAN",

then NM will create that connection *and* lock it to that access points
BSSID, so that users don't run into this situation.  Obviously, as time
goes on we may need to add more to this list.  If anyone has
nominations, please let me know!

Dan

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