Pretty sure it was no ad hoc.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of George Rogato
Sent: Sunday, December 31, 2006 6:08 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] More Saturday Musings- Another (older) Truck-PC type
Right, but do they have th
To even take your water hose analogy, I pay for my water - one little sip
might not hurt, but everyone stopping by to take a sip, leaving the hose on,
draws down my supply and sends my bill up.
However you slice it or justify it in your mind, it's still morally,
ethically, and legally wrong to
Ah, but it does cost me the monthly fee. And if you use it, it is
because I paid the fee, not you. There, seems to me it is theft, you are
using what I paid for without paying.
Pete Davis wrote:
I suppose that the only real difference is that you can drive up
within a few hundred feet of any
With all this discussion, I've not done it in a while for
clients - is there a website somewhere that details all
the methods for A/P and CPE security ?
I remember Win XP being a royal pain in the keister when
trying to get it to work with WEP and Linksys...
Any good guides out there ? Perhaps
Yes, you paid for it, then broadcast it completely unencrypted into the
airspace that is in my car, that is perfectly legally parked in the
street. If your apple tree drops an apple in my yard, it is free for me
to eat. You paid for the water, the fertilizer, and the minerals to
create the frui
Yea but in order to eat the apple from my tree, you have to come into my
house and use my knife to cut it upBad analogy. Using an open AP is
still illegal. I may leave my front door open but it does not make it ok
for you to take stuff. You can listen to cordless phone conversations
but it is s
Not true... a case has already been filed about this exact thing...
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Florida_man_charged_with_stealing_WiFi
http://stpetersburgtimes.com./2005/07/04/Southpinellas/Wi_Fi_cloaks_a_new_br.shtml
It is illegal, period.
Travis
Microserv
Pete Davis wrote:
Yes, you paid for
Yeah, but there was also a state that was making open ap's legal to
connect to.
We hashed that one around quite awhile ago as well.
Travis Johnson wrote:
Not true... a case has already been filed about this exact thing...
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Florida_man_charged_with_stealing_WiFi
http
WEP is easily broken. The much stronger WPA2 (WPA2/AES) is a simple setup.
For personal/home use just use a pre shared key (PSK) which is just a shared
password.
Unlike WEP, with WPA2 there is no fixed or hard to remember HEX code. Just
pick a good shared password for home/personal use.
Just use
It appears that Affinegy (http://www.affinegy.com) has an interesting
automated solution to lock down the security in a home Wi-Fi network.
. . . j o n a t h a n
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Rick Smith
Sent: Monday, January 01, 2007 10:
That particular winch was approximately $1800 new.
Rick Harnish
President
OnlyInternet Broadband & Wireless, Inc.
260-827-2482
Founding Member of WISPA
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Ron Wallace
Sent: Saturday, December 30, 2006 1:41 PM
T
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