War Driving With The Kids
burntfungus writes "War Driving on Vacation with your kids. A drive from Los Angeles to San Luis Obispo's Gum Alley (yes, it's bubble gum on the wall), then on to San Francisco. Hundreds of 802.11b Access points available for mapping with Netstumbler. Some in the middle of nowhere."
I AM A FISH!
This post probably won't be first..... Infact, I KNOW IT WON'T BE
first
dedicated to perdida.
I love you! You are the cutest girl troll in the world!
Yet another crippling bombshell hit the beleaguered *BSD community when recently IDC confirmed that *BSD accounts for less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of the latest Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as further exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.
You don't need to be a Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood. FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.
All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS hobbyist dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.
Fact: *BSD is dead
Jon Katz regular "docks" with young kids. This docking procedure involves placing his members head end to end with the young kids head. He then proceeds to roll the other chaps foreskin over his own dick, thereby giving him delusions of adequecy (i.e. dreaming of owning his very own foreskin).
F*cking pervert.
"Making linux GPL was the best thing I ever did" - Torvalds. I'd hate to see the worst thing...
In Soviet Russia you dant have to put up with these crappy jokes
California is pretty densely populated and has these fine things along the coast. What are you going to do between Bakersfield and Mohave? Or north to Lone Pine? Even my AM/FM station scanning at points cycled through two passes without so much as a fuzzy infomercial. Places like Nebraska, Iowa, and western Kansas... We need something more, what could fill these voids?
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Reason: Your comment looks too much like ascii art.
Eat my nuts!!!
- Marco
yet again, slashdot defines "geek".
Is it just me or did this posting make no sense. Driving, Bubble Gum, Vacations, War, 802.11b, and so forth. Do I have to actually click on the links to figure it out?
How to Download YouTube Videos
I thought it was going to be a story about Afghan goat herders ;-)
Tales from behind the Lagom Curtain
It was good to see somebody got so mad at their access point that they decided to throw them into the Pacific.
Anyone know of a source for magnet mount (like on my roof of the car) 802.11b external antennas?
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Ewww..
You took your kids to what looks to be a narrow, gum plastered alley for vacation?
What's next the world's largest abattoir?
argent
It always makes good media to (re)post about broken wireless networks that could be accessed from anywhere. Lots of dead tree magazines are writing about this.
/. reported about this part my times before.
Who says he is not detecting freely accesable networks that are made to be public.
like me a few minutes ago, here's a link to a Register article about it.
Since netstumbler's web shat the fan you should all go check out www.webs0r.net instead. A patch to wlan and then some scripts make wireless discovery easy.
I'd rather be out GeoCaching. Safer, legal (well no one can arrest you for hacking at least), and there's treasure to be found!
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
Can you believe this guys running 2000 Pro on a p120 laptop???
"The Laptop is an old Pentium 120 laptop, 80 Meg. Ram, running Windows 2000 Pro"
And further he states that it runs quite well. What happened to bloatware???
Site is being naughty, MySQL database has already farted, so I grabbed the URL to the file, if anyone is interested.
_ 22 .zip
http://home.pacbell.net/mariusm/NetStumbler_0_3
OK, this is the how-many-eth article about how 802.11b networks are poorly administered?
We've had
I think everyone gets the point. No need to keep hunting for Yet Another Angle.
The only thing this story adds is the amusing reference to childen and car-seats in PCI-card terms (insert and remove the children from their seats).
Philadelphia, PA - In news that is sure to excite the Linux community, long time Linux developer Todd Stanton got laid.
"I still have trouble believing it myself," said Todd. "I was doing some coding when my power supply blew. Instead of pulling out the spare like I usually would, I decided to head down to Best Buy to check out the new DVD releases. Nothing new was out, so I bought another copy of 'The Matrix' since the one I had was pretty worn out. Turns out the checkout girl was a Matrix fan too and well one thing led to another."
Word spread rapidly on message boards and on IRC. "It's pretty irresponsible of him and shows his lack of dedication to Linux and the open source movement," said Fred Simpson. "If others try to emulate this behavior then a lot of projects could get derailed."
Others like Gary Wilcox were glad to hear the news, "We're tired of all those Microsoft developers shoving their Win-Ho's in our face. Now we can tell them about Todd. Who's laughing now?"
Some developers are also excited that this may increase their chances of getting lucky, but most are being realistic. Walker Crandall said, "We thought we'd all be doing the hokey-pokey after Bill Fitzsimmons got some during the LinuxWorld Conference in 1999. We were fooling ourselves. Nobody got nothing."
This is the third such occurrence for Linux developers since 1991.
- Marco
Really, I can't believe this submission got a front page posting.
A clue for the youngsters here:
Derived from war dialing. A practice of dialing all phone numbers in an area to find which ones have a computer answering. As I recall, the first software for this had the name WAR for some reason.
Yes, there was hacking before the internet and before parents used the net as a babysitter.
(shit - grammer)
Your sig is spelled wrongly. You have confused "you're" meaning "you are" with "your" meaning belonging to you.
Other tips:
They're - they are
There - that place, over there
Their - belonging to them
We also get.
"Mommy, Timmy is hogging all the bandwith".
"Don't make me come back there and pull out your Airport card, Timmy."
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
I thought I read "Driving the kids to war". Well, I'm sure that would have made for a more interesting discussion than another open wireless network.
The universe is held together with duct tape and karma. What goes around, comes around, and gets stuck to your forehead.
Whoop-de-doo! General aviation pilots have been doing this for years on various handheld and panel-mount GPS and LORANs with and without the maps, and, yes, have integrated these units with moving maps on their laptops. People who drive Mercedes have had this option available for at least a couple of years now.
Frankly, you can do the same trip-planning and navigation with a map and an odometer with a trip meter. Why is this such a big hairy deal?
Crap - Here at cal poly in San luis obispo, my little airport network is going to get some freak slashdot effect and instead of everybody not seeing a site, I won't see any sites.
On top of that there will be 50 geek cars parked infront of my house mooching bandwidth.
to email me: take my
Does anyone have a recommendation for which antenna to use for extended range 802.11?
Anyone who posts about bad moderation are themselves off-topic and should be moderated accordingly.
Sheesh. I know people like you. In a few years you'll wonder why your kids are so misguided and your wife has become distant. The clue is: "Because you only pretended to spend time with them!"
A couple weeks ago, I bought an Orinoco Gold access card, downloaded netstumbler, and had my homemade Pringles antenna ready to go.
:)
The wife and I got out last Sunday to see if I could find any access points. We live a few files from Indianapolis, so I figured we would have to go downtown to find any access points. NOT TRUE! Many of the APs we found were on personal home networks. Every time we would pass an apartment complex.. blip!.. an AP or two would show up. Where they encrypted? Heh, no. We made one loop through downtown Indy and came back to our house and we found 40 access points. 5 were encypted.
So, we found one near a Mr. D's (grocery store). We stopped in the parking lot, I set up my Pringles antenna, and browsed the web via someone's @home connection. Really cool!
You can imagine the looks that I received when passersby saw me scanning back and forth with a pringles antenna, wires coming out of it, and a laptop on my lap. Anyway, wardriving is fun for the whole family. It's kinda like Geocaching, but quite a bit easier.
It's true, gum all the way up the wall. They had to put a light up because of the things that happened at night so close to all the bars, yes those and the you and your girlfrend/drunken date at 2am kind. The part most miss from the photos is the true scratch'n sniff smell power of it all (come to think of it no scratching required).heh enjoy
watching where i step in Slo
On the second map there, I see EAFB... I really have to wonder if it was AP-less, or if he just didn't go by there....
;)
Anyone in that area, and curious enough to risk getting shot?
Use a quality 6db omnidirectional attached to a 1-watt 2.4 gig amp. This will give you max legal transmit power taking ERP into consideration. Make sure to get an amp with a high receive gain as well, as that is far more important. A 1 watt amp with ~10db receive gain can be had for around $500 at most places that sell serious wireless gear. winncom.com and hyperlink.com are two that come to mind.
...why this is useful?
I'm not trolling. Seriously.
What I want to know is how long until some industrous folks start driving around with an access point to really screw us up...
Anybody want a peanut?
$5 / month hosted VPS on linux = awesome!
Hrmm, it is funny because I can "War Drive" in the mid-west. That shouldn't happen. ;)
Even the Politburo concurs with Process of Elimination http://process-of-elimination.net
but thats tricky because you are not intercepting, those airwaves are hitting your laptop, therefore your property.
The US law, at least, has long distinguished between a "directed transmission" and a "broadcast transmission", the distinction being whether it was intended for a particular listener (or set of listeners) versus anyone who tuned in.
Basic rule was that you could listen to a directed transmission but couldn't disclose it further. That was later modified with the advent of subscription TV in microwave bands, cellular phones, and so on.
Its like that satelite case. satelite tv companies were bitching that people were just buying the dish and not buying the service. so they were enforced to encrypt the signal cause the govt said hey, its in the open air thats your prob
Yep.
But there's a maze of laws and regulations now so your mileage may vary from the days of the Big Ugly Dish.
I understand your position matches that of the Canadian government with respect to Canadians intercepting and decrypting scrambled satellite subscription services - especially ones where subscriptions are not available to Canadians. B-)
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
It should be noted that war driving will come up with a lot more "open" access points than are actually open.
Savvy companies now put their 802.11b links on the OUTSIDE of the firewall, and require their users to use an encrypted tunnel (ssh, VPN, etc.) to get to the LAN.
(Actually, it's usually a separate "outside" from the general internet, so they can also control forwarding of packets between the wireless users and the rest of the net. If they don't feel like providing a free access port for passers-by they can cut it off. The company users can work through a proxy at the other end of their tunnel.)
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
Actually, if anyone does any war boating on Lake Ontario next summer... All I gotta do is point my defunct Primestar dish towards Canada! :)
Kineska: Cinema, soapbox, music & musings
Gee, I covered this yesterday over at GuerrillaNews. Normally I find headlines from Slashdot... I guess y'all are falling behind. :)
gomi no sensei
Why go to the expense of a nation-wide G3 network when we're already halfway there with better bandwidth!
I know it's kind of late, but here is a great link to a study on war driving that is _much_ more detailed than the original article:
.pdf format]
[note:
http://www.dis.org/filez/openlans.pdf