That's fine, as long as they file their CALEA and 477 Forms :)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Jeromie Reeves
Sent: Wednesday, February 28, 2007 5:09 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] STOOPID linksys / netgear / etc
Wh
What if they wanted to share the network but only with people who
could figure that out? =-)
On 2/28/07, David E. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Rick Smith wrote:
> Can't vendors make it so that whatever you use as the securing KEY can't be
> contained in the hostname, essid or anywhere else ?
Rick Smith wrote:
Can't vendors make it so that whatever you use as the securing KEY can't be
contained in the hostname, essid or anywhere else ? Common Sense...
I'm sure they could, but as soon as a customer decides this is what they
want to do, and can't, angry phone calls will ensue.
No
LOL - why lock it down then?
On 2/28/07, George Rogato <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Almost reminds me when we took over the original dial up isp, the
previous guy used a computer shop to sell his service and turn on subs.
usernames and passwords were the customers first name and last name.
lame
Almost reminds me when we took over the original dial up isp, the
previous guy used a computer shop to sell his service and turn on subs.
usernames and passwords were the customers first name and last name.
lame...
Rick Smith wrote:
happened to open my laptop in town to work on a hotspot o
happened to open my laptop in town to work on a hotspot of mine today.
Say an interesting essid... f6a13. and it was locked down.
Well, I noticed that it was 10 digits, and when I signed on to it and
happened to type that into the WEP KEY area as well, it WAS THE WEP KEY to
use to sign onto i