Best Wireless SSIDs You Have Seen?
Ant writes "Best SSIDs you have seen is the name of the new Broadband Reports' wireless security forum.
Funny ones listed that made me chuckle: WardriversOpenAP,
GET LOST,
HackedAP,
SecureAP (no WEP/WPA), TOP_SECRET, HPD-FieldOffice,
MiddleEarth, HoneyPot, mine, and people's full/last name." I think naming your network 'Default' or 'Linksys' should be a crime ;)
comatose, homeland security, rape me, and how about not broadcasting an ssid?
Several "linksys", a couple with family names, and one called "The Castle"
Just another day in Paradise
The best SSIDs are generic names like linksys or default. Generic names most always mean I get free wireless access.
Gravity is not just a law, it's also a good idea.
N/T
Found one that said "SECURE_ME". A quick Windows share enumeration showed sales data and presumably credit card information avaliable to anyone who was listening.
I informed the business owner that it needed to the secured, and he said his ISP had called and asked him about an "open access point - whatever that is". I sighed and left.
"liberty and justice for all those who can afford it"
The address (somewhat abbreviated) where I live, in case someone wants to ask me for access (since it is "protected" by WEP).
Not trying to be funny here, but I've seen HACKME and my boss insists that I use his last name so that he can remember it. (Even though it's broadcasted.)
I just hope he doesn't get mad at me when he gets hacked and someone starts downloading child porn and The Anarchist's Cookbook using his broadband connection.
-Arthur
Cave ne ante ullas catapultas ambules
Seriously?
NEWSFLASH: SOMEONE WHO PLAYS EVERQUEST DOESN'T KNOW WHICH CASE TO CHOOSE
Wow, a "story" on a slashdot forum about a lame "what's the best post" on another forum.
Too bad I can't mod the entire story as -1 LAME.
is "linksys". From that point, I know that the AP is unsecured, and has a default admin password. I visit a cafe a lot in my town, and they have wireless internet that you have to PAY for, and it's like $20/hour, which is ridiculous to pay that much for wireless internet access. But what's more amusing is that it's unencrypted AND still has the default password to the admin console. I feel sorry for anyone who's paying that $20 to surf the web there.
They kept the SSID simple: FU
goatse and tubgirl
Religion is for people afraid of going to hell.
HackerDetected and Iwillsniffyourpackets are a couple I've seen.
There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell 'em.
In my neighborhood, there is a MiddleEarth, linksys, and a friend's dad has one called BatNetwork (he is obsessed with Batman). The strange thing is they all have WEP or WPA enabled, including the linksys.
http://www.netstumbler.org/showthread.php?t=11311
I can't speak for many others but my SSID is "KeepDrivingAsshole" - I've also seen one in my wardriving travels called, "LeaveMeAlone". Apparently somebody had already had a bit of fun with his network, eh?
I love idealists not because I am one, but because they make life bearable for pragmatists such as myself.
my friend and i were at a summer camp where we werent supposed to have internet access, but we plugged in a WAP we brought and set the SSID to "drewisawanker"
drew was the name of his RA
the next day we saw 3 RA's walking through the hallway trying to triangulate the location of the WAP
crazy kids we were!
That's mine.
That's the name I gave to my parents' WLAN.
when it's a Netgear with WPA running then I don't want to be right.
Best one I've seen - laughed my ass off. I can just imagine a "neighbor" coming over to help them set it up. Hahahahaha.
It's nothing, just you're carbodyluminocap acting up... just a couple of hours to fix.
BeaverNet, and before you ask.. yes, it was "wide open" :)
http://www.fsckin.com/
Real close to my job, "Mr Rodgers Neighborhood" with or w/o spaces can't remember now been a while since I went Net Stumblin'
The "Get Lost" ones always make me chuckle when I see those.
Wang33
PAGERANK++ Robsell.com
Already done on the Netstumbler forums. Personally, I like "You have been hacked fool!". Worst I've personally seen was an address (nnn Afton Valley Ct). Best was "LandOfChocolate". Check them out at Wigle.
Envy my 5 digit Slashdot User ID!
I saw one someone name "Thug"
and another that someone had named "PISS_OFF"
I am Bennett Haselton! I am Bennett Haselton!
All over my neighborhood they're frequently named for the postal address of the home in which they reside, e.g., 15AMaple. Or so I've been told.
12 Maples Drive.
No joke, buddy and I were driving around and saw someone had used their address for SSID. We couldn't stop laughing...
LFS. Have you built your system today?
I don't broadcast the key, but one I use is heyjudedon'tletmedown. It's a blast typing that in and watching others raise an eyebrow.
Man is the lowest-cost, 150-pound, nonlinear, all-purpose computer system which can be mass-produced by unskilled labor.
here
Just
I named my linksys WRT54G as 'netgear'... among the mac address filter, the sveasoft firmware, and the WEP encryption (And living in the woods, the best defense), i'm not worried about war drivers.
Runnin' On Empty
My WAP is connected to an 'untrusted' interface on my firewall, such that users can access the web and DNS only. The SSID is, with "addr" replaced with my street address, "come_4_beer_at_addr". Haven't had any takers, yet. :)
Using your name actually may turn out to be a good thing if your network is insecure. Somebody in my apartment complex had a wide-open network with the SSID being their name. I was able to track them down by that in order to tell them they should secure it.
They were wondering why their cable connection was so slow.
THIS_IS_A_SHIT_STORY
Vs lbh pna ernq guvf, ybt bss abj. Tb bhgfvqr. Syl n xvgr.
My last name is Default, you insensitive clod!
I think the funniest SSIDs one sees in Kismet are the garbage ones (like ^L*&^G^x#, etc).
Apparently according to the Kismet developer this is where MS Windows-based wireless clients "leak" crap into the packets... nice...
Mine is "Sorry, the network is down right now." with MAC filtering enabled. Nobody ever stops to play with my AP.
How am I supposed to fit a pithy, relevant quote into 120 characters?
YOu can search for SSIDs, MACs, and cities and states at WiFiMaps.com. Funniest ones I've seen:
hellostumbler - Framingham, MA
buyclamsonline.com - Pittsburgh, PA
Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
Yep, that's a bunch of a local WiFi provider's APs. There is normally a "penis" in there, too.
I have a feeling that for the really amusing ones, I should walk down towards campus and sniff the dorm and off-campus housing from UCDavis.
--
Evan
"$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
I used to live fairly close to a major street and not too far from a university campus, so wardrivers were always trying to connect to my network.
So I decided to ask WWTBOFHD? (What Would The Bastard Operator From Hell Do?)
So, I set up a nice AP called 'linksys' with no WEP. Obviously, every freeloader on the planet would try and connect to it.
Oh, and you could connect to it alright. The problem was that it was connected directly to a proxy server that rerouted every web request directly to goatse.cx and blocked everything else.
Apparently the word got around, and the number of people trying to access that AP went down precipitously after that.
I'm such a bastard...
At work, it's called Roswell because the basestations (Apple's) looked like spaceships.
At home, it's called Orwell because that's what my husband picked.
And I've heard someone has called hers The Hordes of Attila, because it always asks her if she "wants to join the Hordes of Attila?"
What's the matter with Default if you change the default password and enable encryption?
I meta-mod all positive moderation Unfair, because it's abuse of the system.
I set up one for a buddy of mine with this SSID. His building is right next to a post office, so it adds credibility. It's hilarious to watch people come in and see "do you want to connect to noconnect-federaloffense?" One literally jumped back from his laptop.
I guess the Man has us trained well!
Mine's called "Default"... and has no password.
;)
Oh, wait... it's not mine, it's my neighbor's. That's why I don't need to pay for broadband service
lorem ipsum, dolor sit amet
PearlyGates is for my AExpress I use traveling (In missoula right now) and Katahdin is for my home BaseStation.
Who are you? The new #2 Who is #1? You are #617565. I am not a number, I am a free man! Muhahaha.
NotGoingToGetOnThisInternetBitch
After we got our dog Maxie, and lived with him for a few weeks, I renamed our network MaxiesMadhouse. Six months later, it still fits.
My brother is into arcade games, and has quite a few video and pinball machines around his house.
I just use Snowball, though - the name of my cat.
--RJ
thessidofdoom
Linksys is the name of my network.
What are the chances of that?
At a hotel that charged for Internet access, someone had an access point with the SSID, "LeaveBeeror5dollarsatRoom505". Nice, cheap, easy Internet access without the $15 charge the hotel wanted.
I always figured it wouldn't hurt to use a random string of letters and numbers and not broadcast the SSID. e.g., 2j9djfjZJ3. At least it won't give any info on what's found on the network, and it'd be nearly impossible to guess. -- Paul
OpenSource.MathCancer.org: open source comp bio
My computers always get names from Tolkien so it was a no-brainer that my router get called palantir.
How does a wireless SSID possess a you've?
If you're going to submit a lame story, at least check your apostrophes.
Vs lbh pna ernq guvf, ybt bss abj. Tb bhgfvqr. Syl n xvgr.
retardflyngmonkysw/flamthrowers
I get raised eyebrows by accident -- Chicken And Porn. No one forgets it.
My home AP is named "FuckOff". It's secured (to the extent that an AP *can* be secured) well enough.
My neighbor INSISTS on leaving his WRT54G unsecured. I change it whenever I'm bored (I've also connected to the LAN, and then to one of his shared printers and printed out some "interesting" photos). I'll name his AP stuff like "pimpwifi" "secureme" "hellomike", etc. Nothing too interesting really.
-This sig intentionally left blank
I named my Icarus.
Mine is "omfg"
Understanding is a three-edged sword. -- Kosh Naranek
I am a member of a community wireless network over Thessaloniki, in Greece. We have named many of our nodes based on the Lord of the Rings universe and Middle Earth places, so there is "Morgul", "Amon Sul", "Tirith", "Rivendell" etc. nodedb link
I named my wireless access point-
o ckmaster
Dorkmaster
It's a fun name, and if you run several WAPs, you can plug in any vowel in the place of dOckmaster's "O"
For reference,
http://www.google.com/search?q=ncsc+d
Got caught once between a traffic cop and a busted hood and hence had to take a Defensive Driving course. Ended up at a Marriott's Conference room with my laptop and 8 hours of "God help me".
Popped up the Available networks list, Marriott's own was thankfully not secured, however they did want me to validate by entering my room number. Hmm.. how about "301". Oh joy!
Browsed for the next 8 hours with out a hitch..
Rapid Nirvana
BoroughPolice, who just happen to be right next door.
Speak for yourself.
puppies and thanksforyourmacaddress
My SSID is, quite simply:
DAVE
I really couldn't think what to call it. And then my friend picked up the box and said 'Hallo Daaave'.
That, was that.
"I hate Cthulhu, Cthulhu hates me, I kill his cultists, He eats worlds for tea"
The first thing I did when I got a Linksys WAP11 was to change the SSID to MaryPoppins. I briefly tried hiding the SSID altogether, but my laptop kept getting confused. I enabled the 128 bit WEP key, which may be far from perfect, but, at the least it implies KEEP OUT. These days I mostly use wired 1000Base-T though.
Easily the best I've seen
2b2b2b415448300d
I used to name my phone that way in bluetooth.
A lot of people actually were wondering what was wrong with their cellphones, when they explored their bluetooth-neighbourhood (or got a bluetooth message from me)...
Slashdot: stuff for news, nerds that matter, matter for news, stuff that nerd
that was a joke.... ffs
;)
Well, i THINK it was?,
wait, A/C? maybe it wasn't but it WOULD of been funny
- http://www.milkme.co.uk
He linked back to my site a few days later, finding it funny. (I won't link directly to his webserver now, to avoid a slashdotting to a site most of you can't read since it's in Dutch)
The Virtual Bookcase: book reviews
ie. I'd use an SMC, name it the default for a netgear, then change to a DLink, etc.
Then I'd watch the access logs and see what fish I could catch trying to take a nibble.
Seeing that I was living in a pretty dense, busy area in downtown Toronto, I watched more than a couple people try to access my AP.
*****
:)
It's easy to remember
Why can't I name it linksys? I've got a dlink, I see no issue to naming it linksys. Oh, screw flanders.
the AP is ap_123456. That's the default AP on my Asus unit and I've never been able to access the control panel to change it. Then again, I guess that's not very funny.
-Tim
The SSID emanating from my car while driving down the road with a Sprint PCS card and an AD-HOC wireless network so others in the car can share the connection. I still have yet to have any other cars travelling in my direction connect.
I think the one most relevent to current events is the coolest. That'd be Cisco's "tsunami" default SSID on some of their access points.
One of my neighbors' SSID is "private no access". Of course, there's no WMA, WEP, or MAC filtering - it's wide open. ;)
C'mon, baby, kiss The King.
...meaning I expect as brillant future for this network. :-)
I don't have much to add.
mine is hackme - however i did see one named "tinytitties" yesterday.
Alot of people around here name their network after their adress! I am not kidding, its fucking hilarious, I wonder where I can get a good connection? Number 23 you say? Then I'll drive just 200 meters down the road, thank you....
BitchNet
'StumbleThis'
It had WEP enabled, I didn't try any further to get in, but did get a pretty big kick out of the name.
I named my Linksys AP "Default" just to mess with people...
FindMeWinBeer
- Just my $0.02, take with a grain of salt, your mileage may vary.
SSIDs listing the geographic location of the AP are a good idea in my opinion. If you know there's an AP at 185th and Birchwood from a cursory glance, you either use a non-interfering frequency or make sure the directional antenna is not throwing garbage that way. Company information is much more useful though. "WmDavis Rsrch AP01" lets me look in the phone book and find "William Davis Research" to yell at them. Troubleshooting an intermittant PTP link in Seattle, I discovered someone claiming to be on a particular street several miles away throwing waay to much signal and cutting off the customer. Driving down there with a directional only got me down to a particular block of leased warehouses, with two dozen companies. If I could have said "Yeah, that's Airborne Express", I could have had a word with their guy and gotten it moved. Instead, I had to swap cable to lose some loss, realign the antenna on each end, insert an amplifier to further drop the losses, and change channel. But at least I knew where the interference was coming from; At many other places in the city, I could have moved them to a different POP with a twist of the antenna.
Some of the odd ones I saw while looking to find free spectrum:
"MYWRHSEAP" (And on the same frequency, farther down, "MYOFFAP")
"USN_Secure" and "NSA Fort Mead"
"iVEgOTbIGbALS" (Spelled like that)
"Bad firmware dont use"
"Cyberdyne Systems"
"CPE1704TKS"
"plz dont hack"
"Jerrys porno"
"NOT STARBUCKS ASSHOLE"
"Change your password, moron"
"Unconnected"
Also saw a bunch pushing some agenda or another.. "GoreIn04", "BushSucks", "Lower My Taxes", etc
.sig: Now legally binding!
Wardrivers are Welcomei mpbot9000
Go Big Girl Productions
Air Eggroll
Rebels Rule (In a dormitory at school, our rival school is the Rebels)
Sniper's Den
Big Daddy's
Penguin Army of Doom
wirelessland
What?
cute-little-network
p
Yeah, I live in a college town.
I live on Abell Avenue, and one of my neighbors has an access point named ABELLHIZZY. I don't think it's Snoop Dogg, though.
It does have WEP protection, too. Snoop says: Stay the hizell out of my access pizzoint, muthafucka.
jf
A kid in the dorm room next to mine named his AP "Internet would be nice".
We were having router problems, what can I say...
Mine, Mine, Mine
no carrier
I RTFM
fucking cordless phones
YOUR SSID
this song is just 6 words long
vRG18bNuW2940F17sM8e (funny because no wep wpa etc)
And my #1 favorite
Shit N Surf
help me i've cloned myself and can't remember which one I am
i live by a busy highway (i65) and have my ap pointing out the window and named free_internet
i dont keep my machines at home turned on so i dont really care who accesses the net through me. i log mac's though so if someone does do something i can show the authorities that (unless they know you can spoof your mac) it wasn't me...
As in the Floo Network.
Dear diary: Today I stuffed some dolls full of dead rats I put in the blender.
Although lots of people are bashing it, I think default is actually quite a good name (assuming that the router isn't still in its completely default config!) Linksys is not so good as it gives away the manufacturer and allows an attacker to target the attacks. I do however think that default is a lot better than people using house or family names, as that identifies where the AP is. Even using mordor or middleearth or similar can give away your interests, and thus possibly who you are to someone who knows your street well... default is nice and unassuming.
Yocto Bytes -- SSID :) Just fun sounding names. And big ass numbers. :)
Yotta Bytes -- iPod
Pebi Bytes -- G5
Zetta Bytes -- Powerbook
"Shut up about my driving. You're still alive."
"Why are you not at your post?" -StarWars IV
http://www.tk421.net/
is my sssid. Although I know that I will regret naming it this in 1997, 2001, or 2004. By then, though, I will have gone back in time, prevented the ratification of certain ammendments and sent a T-800 to become president and kill sarah connor.
The best one I've heard was from a buddy who is into wardriving... he said he found one that was:
"GetTheFuckOffMyNetwork"
-- You are in a maze of little, twisty passages, all different... --
NoWarDrivingHere
Why broadcast just 1 SSID when you can broadcast several thousand?
Fake AP is a tool that generates thousands of beacon frames so that your AP, named "12381" can get lost in the shuffle. It's not fool proof, but it is funny to hear netstumbler wet itself when you come in the vicinity of it.
"penis" is one I've seen a lot of here in Sioux Falls.
Then there appears to be several others done by the same group with a similar theme - "MobilePenis", "HandheldPenis", "LaptopPenis" and the like. Of course, these are all open networks...
I've also seen "hacked" on a network with and 256 bit WEP and MAC filtering, as well as several other measures which are in the protocol layer.
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
LOOPBACK
I have mine set that way AND I have it moderately secured. I have WEP enabled, which I know doesn't do much, but I also have MAC filtering. How common is MAC spoofing, and are there any exploits out there that can figure out some valid MACs from the over-the-air traffic?
I like using the address, not because I want neighors to waddle over and ask me about using my network or blather on about how they're a nerd too, but because if someone else picks it up they'll know right away "oh, that's not my own network, that's why I can't get this damn thing to work".
State your case.
One simple rule for its versus it's
This ESSID Ive seen while drinving trough Munic searching for open APs.
And they are named Middle-Earth(no wep) and The Shire(wep). As I live in a rural area I'm not much concerned with war drivers. The one with the wep key is just to keep the other PC's in the House off of the WiFi that runs my SqueezeBoxes (Shameless plug for www.slimdevices.com).
Meddle thou not in the affairs of Dragons, for thou art crunchy and with most anything.
I found one in my neighborhood called "ShutUpImLazy".
--- Nothing is secure.
If I had an AP in my hose, why would I care if someone knew my address? Are terrorists out there searching the globe for the locations of $60 wireless routers? Besides, they can just wander around and mark where the signal boundaries are and my house would be at the center of the circle. Its broadcasting, so its not going to be very secret.
While living in an apartment this summer, my roommate and I set our SSID to the telephone number to our apartment and enabled WEP so that no one could use it. Within a few days we got a few phone calls from other residents asking for the WEP key. We gave out the key to everyone who agreed to split the cost of the DSL with us and ended up paying about $5/month. We didn't really need the DSL for anything that bandwith intensive (nor do I think anyone else did), so this setup actually ended up working out quite well.
-Matt
Duke '05
"I have to wonder about that. I can't pick up my access point more than 20 feet from my house with my laptop... "
I live in a large metropolis. From my 16th floor Apartment there must be at least 60 AP's I can pick up. One has an address as the SSID and I figure its about 600 yards away.
My own Orinico card has trouble working with my Linksys AP from 1 foot away, but it can pick up that 600 yard signal no problem.
Guy down the next apt. building doesn't care if people use his WAP, he named his SSID "enjoy"
:P
Since my computer names were dilbert characters, my SSID is cubefarm
It was also common to use what looked like a business name or the a person's first name ("lisa") as the SSID. Some AP's had random alphanumerics or what was obviously an attempt at a password for the SSID.
I also did a very basic analysis of some of the interesting things I discovered, such as...
The sample size for this was about 250 AP's during the outbound trip. On the return trip I ran NetStumbler for a lerger portion of the ride and recorded over 1000 AP's (some of which were duplicates of course) but I haven't taken the time to anlyze this larger data set yet.
I didn't try to connect to any of the AP's... most of them would come and go within a few seconds anyway. :)
or possibly "Mastercard Accounts".
Sitting in my apartment I have seen:
3STUDS (open)
pervertcentral (us! not open to general public, WEPped and MAC'd and all)
nydia-kaye (open)
theguys (WEPped)
Wireless (WEPped)
eaglerayeast (error of some kind with Airport)
pax_central (WEPped - a rip off on us maybe?)
rav4 (open)
Mishi (error joining network, like with eaglerayeast)
All this from lying in bed at different points in time.
"heaven"
:)
The connection tool says "Connected to: heaven". It's a long-range connection
LOAD "SIG",8,1
LOADING...
READY.
RUN
But since linksys uses linksys, aren't there specific routers that use default? Thus using default is the same as using linksys; one can easily look up the default user/pass and log in to it.
After seeing an access point named "867-5309" I drove down the street humming that song in my head
http://tinyurl.com/4ny52
My g/f got a cable modem. I couldn't think of anything catchy to call the SSID on the WAP I put at her place, so I chose something vile:
"56k AOL dialup"
Nobody will ever bother with it now!
Even using mordor or middleearth or similar can give away your interests, and thus possibly who you are to someone who knows your street well
Exactly. Take, for example, the SSID "PoopyYard" which is present in my neighbourhood. The guy who lives at the back of our house owns four dogs. Any guess where this SSID is being broadcast from?
I kid you not.
The gift of death metal does not smile on the good looking.
I saw one called "Bad Poodles" while war walking around a University Campus I was a network admin for.
----------
perl -e 'print(pack("H*","646176652e7761676e657240676d616
I'll just wave that one on.
"Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
--Dr.W.Edwards Deming
GetOffMyNetwork
A couple minutes latter I heard chuckling from the living room. He finally managed to find my "wardrivingislame" SSID.
Speak truth to power.
I had a neighbor once (kinda weird--45 and lives with his mother, and just weird). And the first time he met me he started chatting about computers boasting how great he was (I just was creeped out by this guy...and hell I am a guy). He was telling me how there was this "honey pot" in the neighborhood that he was thinking of breaking into because it didn't have any security. First I had no idea about the term "honey pot" and it took me five minutes to shut him up to get an answer about what that meant. So, I was thinking it odd about this "honey pot" because I had never detected another wireless connection in the area except my own. Then he mentioned the name of the SSID, and I realized he was looking at mine. I told him to go see if he could hack it. A week later I saw him and he said he had been trying to hack it and for the life of him could not...so much for absolutely needing WEP :) Long live MAC address. I prefer MAC address since I do not have to worry about writing down my wep key (typos) in case of hard drive reformatting. And I have an extra wireless card for friends.
I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
No terrorists might not be looking for you, but if 'that other guy' at work has just had his promotion given to you instead, he might be out looking..
Saw this ID yesterday, but couldn't connect. I guess they'd been hacked one too many times.
I thought the actions of Mr. Moss after his touchdown were hilarious and completely on topic. The Green Bay FudgePackers actually moon losing teams. Moss just pretended to moon them. It's a light retribution for earned karma.
Laws are for people with no friends.
So what does an SSID of ETOYOC tell you about me?
"Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
--Dr.W.Edwards Deming
SSID FBI CIA NASA Monica Lewinsky Osama Bin Laden Password to my AP is password Check out my P0rn collection Windows XP Microsoft Slashdot Eat my shorts
Umm....let's see how hard it is to figure out who is running an AP.
Step 1. Get laptop or $20 Wifi strength meter.
Step 2. Walk around.
Step 3. Use publicly available sources to find out who lives there
And if you really think someone gives a shit if you like LOTR, I think you need a bigger tinfoil hat buddy.
I have my SSID set to "im me joel2600". For awhile before I moved away from college i'd always get instant messages from random people telling me they saw my access point while wardriving.
What really suprised me was the amount of people out there actually looking around, but one good side effect was that it became an easy way to attract some awesome friends.
I just had to post this one.... My favorite SSID was one I saw with the full street address of some brilliant guy. I guess if he gets lost in town he just has to go wardriving and find his AP. Dar
I saw this once in Brooklyn- "Get the fuck off my shit"
Perhaps my favorite was "drunkchicks" :)
There was another along the lines of "wanttosharethis5551212" or something.
For a valid list of MAC addresses you can check IEEE list, anyway anybody who is trying to avoid your MAC address filtering is going to use an address from your filter list so you have to check for valid traffic but when you are not connected
Mine is NETSTUMBLER with WEP and Mac filtering. I figure someone is cracking up out there when they drive by my house.
Tim Smith - Ramblings from Nerd Land
"HackedByChinese" used to be there too. It was unsecured, and did have a default name... I thought I'd help them out.
We have a high turnover in our apt building. Possibly because people think it's a dump filled with computer nerds. Maybe.I recently discovered that one of my neighbors' WAPs has the SSID "defualt" (note the misspelling). I'm still not sure if it was done as a joke, or if he just can't spell.
I named mine "unplugged", which seemed pretty clever at the time I set it up (about two years ago).
All my customers are set up this way unless they are technical enough to notice.
Humor from a Genetically Molested Mind
Not anymore...
Haha, good point. (That joke immediately occurred to me after posting, too.) Of course, that's not my SSID ...
Of course, choosing and not broadcasting the SSID should only be one of several layers of security. (Using whatever WEP or WAP security you have available and changing keys frequently, MAC filtering, reducing the transmission strength on the AP to the minimal level necessary, etc.) -- Paul
OpenSource.MathCancer.org: open source comp bio
Which do you think is better and why?
My vote is for MAC:
1) Don't have to worry about wep keys (and typos)
2) Don't have to worry about formatting my hard drive and then trying to find that piece of paper with my WEP
3) I have been told that WEP slows down the computer signal since it has to utilize the WEP. SInce MAC is always being utilized there is no real extra step (am i right about this)?
4) I give a spare wireless card to when I have a guest over with a laptop - and thusly take it back when they leave - so I don't have to reconfigure my router.
What do you guys think
I mod down so you can mod up. Your welcome.
"IfUcanReadThisUR2Close" ?
Dogs look up to men; cats look down on men; But Pigs! Pigs can look men square in the eye. -Churchill
after standing in line to get a pass to use the wifi a couple of years ago, the women at the counter looked at me and said simply "You are elephant?" -- of course, I had no idea how to reply to this. I said "no, I am not Elephant." to which she repeated "Elephant? You are elephant?"
;-)
It took me a few seconds to figure out, they were reading the name of people's PC's off the wifi so they could assign the ID. That way, the didn't charge people who had broken configurations and couldn't use the system -- avoiding all the return issues. Clever. The guy in front of me had a PC named "Elephant".
The funny thing is, my initials are "AP" and at the time I had an eMachines box. For whatever reason I'd named my laptop that after restoring some data, so the actual machine name was:
APeMachine (or APEmachine)...
The problem with quotes on the internet, is that nobody bothers to check their veracity. -- Abraham Lincoln
I think the'll probably be changing that due to it's negative connotations in the future.
:)
Elements is my favorite. *you know who you are*. And if you see it; bug ogg! It's protected.
I went through a dorm hall a few months back with my iBook before the rouge ap's got shut down. Funny stuff.
They all had MAC filtering on the floor I went through, though no wep.
One of the extra campus dep's here uses only MAC filt.
The main campus uses vernier boxes in front of the dhcp server and router. You try and get on and a webpage with login info gets shoved at you on port 80. GOod system.
-=fshalor
So...
If I'm MAC address filtering how are you going to be able to figure out which MAC addresses I'm allowing to connect to my network?
First you'r have to know the manufacturer of the network cards. And then what? That page only seemed to list manufacturers, and not the complete MAC address.
One of my friends and I got bored one night, so we went driving...
I think the funniest SSID I saw was "bigfloppydonkeydick"...and that was BEFORE I found out it had default settings.
Other notables include:
linkgoatse [mine; I should configure it to reroute all queries to the obvious, as a poster above did...]
Linksys [note the case change!]
dont_touch
Sniff My Dump
Of course, I personally love "insecure"...you'd be surprised how many of the APs around me have that as the default.
My favorite was my friend daring me to connect, claiming he had a "secure" access point...and then, a day later, discovering the lack of encryption and default password.
I'll have a better list to post later; my ipw2200 outputs to dmesg every time an AP is detected.
It's only an insult if it's not true.
BeNiceOrIBanMac
My brother's SSID is "TheLady", and it is broadcast in his suburban, residential neighborhood (although it is locked down with wpa as well). Something feels kind of good about logging in to "TheLady"....
At home I use "MoosecockAP". Some friends thought the joke below was really funny, so I felt obliged to name my Cisco AP350 after it.
Two Canadians are sitting in a bar, and getting bored. They decide to play 20 questions.
The first Canadian tries to think of a word and after a little pondering comes up with the word: moosecock.
The second Canadian tries his first question, "Is it something good to eat?"
The first guy thinks a moment then laughs and replies "Sure, I suppose you could eat it."
The second Canadian says, "Is it a moosecock?
I was sitting in a car in a residential neighborhood Palo Alto, looking for a wireless AP to read me email. Someone's AP was labeled with their street address, which made it easy to drive up in front of their house for better reception.
Also, I wandered around my neighborhood one day, on bike, because I was bored...
I live in a suburban neighborhood in the middle of the woods.
I found in excess of twelve access points.
Only two had non-default settings.
Needless to say, I don't need to worry about my broadband bill...
It's only an insult if it's not true.
Linksys is not so good as it gives away the manufacturer and allows an attacker to target the attacks.
It gives away a manufacturer; not the manufacturer. My 'Linksys' might be running on an Airport.
That's my fave. This was actually the default SSID on one of IBM's early accesspoints.
Buy the President
Found a secured AP in my building with an SSID of VIRUS * BROADCAST which made me chuckle.
My own SSID is LO-FI.
"I have a cunning plan..."
Some good ones:
Dog
Sesame
851-JERK
greekfreak
My penis
I read your email.
as a take off the thinkgeek.com sticker.
That's my current SSID. On my old 11 MB AP, I had it set to RealmOfTheElectricDog. Had one neighbor ask me about that one. :)
the software user interface for most wireless hardware is so bad, so poorly written, so intimidating, that I pray to god that the defaults will get me thru the day. This is clearly a case where customer service is a zero priority. Maybe the avg /. geek, who is clearly a log or two off normal, can deal with this stuff, but I would bet 10 dollars that a survey of avg users would find
a lot of frustration.
You do realize once your WEP/WPA is broken, we can pluck a MAC out of the air, and then by spoofing, still compromise your network, yes?
Not that this is your problem, you're doing far more than most and I applaude such - but do blame the vendors for giving you substandard encryption/encryption options.
I keep my own (above named) AP closed, but the neighbors are wide open, default admin passwords, etc.
I carry a Canary Wireless AP detector and am amazed by the number of wide open APs I find. I am a bit concerned that my MAC address remains in their DHCP table after I'm gone.
I recently downloaded the eval release of SMAC, which allows me to spoof my MAC address, otherwise it is possible that my WiFi card's MAC address could be used to track me down, being a unique number and all.
BTW, SMAC just automates an otherwise manually doable process, basically tweaking a couple registry settings.
actually it's easier than that, just sniff the traffic for a while.
Snowden and Manning are heroes.
That you like Road Runner (read the SSID backwards).
Usually. A rather nasty neighbor of mine configured his AP with the name "linksys", but it's quite well secured, with WEP, MAC restriction, and the other manufacturer bells and whistles turned on.
Said manufacturer being NetGear.
//Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
While scanning in my home town, in a residential area, I found "Mom's Network".
If it can go wrong it wnetscape: Segmentation Fault, Core dumped
It may seem dumb to have it named linksys, but at the same time, it's only possible to use some of them when the SSID is still linksys. I can't remember the details, but I think that with WEP on in some models, you aren't able to connect to the AP unless it is still named linksys.
Retarded? Yes.
That's what we live with when friends and family think Futureshop really does stock good products at decent prices (no matter how hard one tries to dissuade with explainations).
My home machine is named "Sh0dan" and my work machine is named "Xerxes". I thought it only fitting to name my WAP "Citadel", being a wireless base station and all. :)
"Apparently so, but suppose you throw a coin enough times. Suppose one day, it lands on its edge."
"goaway"
"iliketrafficlights"
"monkeypoo"
and someone's open wifi in my building is now called
"penisforbreakfast"
Definitely opportunities for some creativity here...
With or without the name of the manufacturer, it is the same. You can always discover the manufacturer - MAC address is unique, and its first part is assotiated with the manufacturer.
No sig today.
Ansible For those of you who don't get it, it's a faster-than-light communications device from the book Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card. -- J.P.
Some great ones I have seen are : allyourpasswordsarebelongtous, 1ink$y$, and an unsecured one with the name of CANT_HACK_THIS
I have a friend who is planning on using her ham license to set up a wifi point on Channel 1 (which, apparently, overlaps an amateur band).
To satisfy the amateur requirement that all transmissions must identify themselves by callsign at least every ten minutes, she's going to use hers as the SSID (broadcast).
In Grandville, MI there's one (on 44th St. between I-196 and Canal Ave. if anyone cares) called GoAheadIDontMind, presumably coming from one of the apartment complexes next to the road.
We have more to fear from the bungling of the incompetent than from the machinations of the wicked.
My access point's SSID is "819 Peralta" which, not coincidentally, is my house's street address. I leave my access point wide open to anyone who wants to use it. I've only had one person admit to using my access point though my MACID log has shown that 65 or so people have connected.
The only downside to having an open access point is that I have to be a little more cautious what network services I have exposed.
-- "Most people prefer a popular myth to an unpopular truth"
If I was living somewhere where there are a lot of religious nuts (i.e. bible belt religious conservatives etc), I would think of the most blasphemous thing possible that is still a valid SSID. (perhaps something like GodSucks or ThereIsNoGod)
I knew someone who did that. They just wanted ppl to come by and ask for access so they could at least try to control who was on the network. Most people have more bandwidth than they want and some don't mind sharing.
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
For some reason making my SSID "stopleeching" didn't prevent my neighbor from using it to download DVDs over BitTorrent 24 hours a day....
/. is good for you.
Wonder if Cisco is going to change their default SSID name :-)
I mean, what's wrong with a little bit of deception? For good measure you could think about using Fred Cohen's Deception Toolkit (DTK) on the firewall adjacent and make it look like a really attractively leaky box. Add a LaBrea tarpit as secondary MX and you're ready to make friends.
.
Yeah, I know. I didn't bother either
= Ch =
Insert
eatmyjunk - the neighbors don't know what to think...
I think there are several layers of stupidity. Around my gf's place, not are there a few of the standard "linksys" and "default" gateways... but upon trying to connect to the gateway itself I was able to login with the "admin" username (no password) which is generally default.
I didn't do anything, but the temptation was there to play around. Perhaps a good slashdot poll would be for what one should rename such open gateways to?
I live in a very bad neighborhood, so mine is a variance of "WhoreHouse".
-- Note: If you don't agree with me, don't bother replying. I won't read it.
The best one I saw was at my friend's condo. Someone closeby has an ap which is broadcasting the SSID "Stealthy".
... And so it comes to this.
At home I have a router being used as a WAP, on a 10. domain, with an odd IP address, 128-bit WEP, MAC filtering, an SSID of SHINJI, changed password, and SSID broadcast off.
Oh yeah, and running all the latest firmware.
RoundTop
thats the best ssid around my apartment
lose != loose
I worked for a university and one of my tasks was to track down rogue wireless routers (ones not setup by the school's NOP department). My favorites were the ones that had the building and room number for the SSID, they made it really easy to find them. There was always the concern that someone would get smart and use the same SSID as the what the official APs used, but if they did I didn't notice...
FoundNews.com - get paid to blog.,
That's both a thought for the day, a way of life, and the SSID on the AP in my apt.
Strange that even though it's soooo unfashionable, I still found about 8 leeches hanging off it last week.
I have a Siemens AP/Router/Print Server. My SSID is chairman_meow, but I think the camp has faded - it's time for a new SSID. It supports group-based access control, so I allow Everyone access to DNS, HTTP and HTTPS. My personal machines are unrestricted on another group. I also run 128-bit WEP. I might ditch the wep for a day or two, change the SSID to default or something, just to see what bubbles up. I'm curious about wardrivers in my area.
All time favorite: MonkeyCheesePants - Funny, but hopefully no more than that - I wouldn't want to know. Runnerups: Bring beer for password (university campus) nowerenotStarbucksmovealong - near a coffee shop
My school blocks torrent. One day, doing laundry, my iBook offers to connect to 'linksys' for me. I agree. It's an unprotected WRT54G. Default passwords. I torrented an ISO that I'd been needing badly.
Oh, I later located the house with the AP. It was 1500 feet away, and had just a taste under 2 bars of signal. Not bad for unmodified consumer hardware....
You should use AdiumX on your Mac.
I see two SSIDs at my house aside from my own, one is a venerable 'linksys', never protected...
The other (WEP protected and such), changes ever so often...
It was 'Voltron', then it was 'MyLittlePony'. I sense a theme....
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
When I came online my neighbor flipped out. He had just started working on an export contract with some Arab parties. He was convinced that The Man was checking up on him because the guys were on a watchlist. He was very relieved when I told him it was me.
It's that incident that keeps me from disabling broadcast - I love thinking that my less-than-savvy neighbors are a little uneasy because of that.
You'd understand if you knew my neighbors.
[insert sig file here]
My buddy uses names like Not Available for all of his ssid.... pretty good.
"The Internet Is For PORN"
I like te ones where people have thier address or apartment number.
It's like saying,"Hey criminals, I'm over here and I likely have a laptop!"
Pretty Pictures!
DialupAP: That's what I call mine. No security whatsoever and I've been hacker-free since 2002!
The thing I don't understand about this is, by default, most Linksys (and other) wireless access points default to not allowing remote comfiguration?
whybother
ZZ
In my apartment complext, my WAP is locked down through IP filters. Yes, I know that's neither secure nor locked down. But it's good enough for my needs. (And actually, I think that proving you're an incompetent sysadmin may be a good thing in these Ashcroftian, DRM'd days.)
My SSID is my phone number.
Intriguingly, in the three years I've been here, the SSID's went from mine alone, to about three or four others, some secured, some not. And my phone has never rung with someone looking for a temporary connection.
It's never been called.
I'm a bit surprised to read all these 5 posts where all these friendly geeks have all these obnoxious and relatively useless WAP policies.
Oh yes, I know. I've done it before.
How am I supposed to fit a pithy, relevant quote into 120 characters?
I think thats pretty good...
Could Jesus microwave a burrito so hot that he himself cou
Generic names most always mean I get free wireless access.
.11g. I got the old .11b. I don't have broadband. I think it would be fun jut to power it up (changed password) with the default SSID, but not connected to anything. It might be fun to watch a wardriver stop and try to hack it.
My friend upgraded to
The truth shall set you free!
Except that he wasn't configuring them remotely. He just switched over to their network because it was open. 192.168.0.1, and you're in.
i'm the jedidiahmarkfoster your parents warned you about
Remote configuration is only if you aren't connected to the AP. Anybody can configure a router if they are connected to the LAN. I think Linksys uses 192.168.0.1 but if remote configuration is enabled, then you can log in through the IP that your ISP gives.
[insert lame joke here]
I have an AP, named "linksys" and a fairly efficient antenna located high up. If anyone wants to use it, they are my guest. Abuse it, and it'll be gone. What's wrong with opening bandwidth for people in your vicinity to make use of?
-fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
I accidentaly renamed a neighbors unprotected network, thinking I was renaming my own. When I realized my mistake, I wanted to rename it back but I couldnt remember the exact spelling of the name they had used. So, I renamed it "oops". That was 6 months ago, and the "oops" network is still around. I wonder if they are continuing to use it under the new name I gave it...
"Tsunami"
Come on, people.
Mine is currently named "The Matrix"
Only hax0r SSID in my "linksys/default" subdivision.
Currently bidding on sig
No you "didn't get the job done". All you did was satisfy your own sanctimonious self by locking them out. As you say earlier, they most likely went back to exactly the same way they were operating before.
Nice job.
Do you have many friends? Dates?
How raised you? Did they not teach you to not take things without being asked.
Freedom or George Bush
When I go to game paper & dice rpg, I take my laptop. It makes keeping track of the game easier...anyway, my friend's SSID is I_AM_NOT_A_SLUT
In reality, I guess he's not an easy slut (WEP&MAC filtering), but still a slut to the right wardriver.
"Only one thing, is impossible for god: to find any sense in any copyright law on the planet." Mark Twain
When I first got a wireless card for my laptop I ran out into my backyard to see what networks I could pick up. Right at the top of the list of available networks was "Kill_the_White_Man". As I moved closer to my African-American neighbor's house it got stronger.
He's a nice guy, so the next day when I ran into him I asked if he had wireless. He flinched and said "No". That afternoon the network had been renamed something innocous.
My network is called "Kill_the_Who!?"
Mine's called Ansible. I guess that makes a bit of a promise about lag, or lack thereof. (It's open...)
Tired of free iPod sigs? Subscribe to my blacklist
i did something sort of like that for a while. last time i moved, i didn't get internet access at my new apartment for about 3 months. i still powered up the access point, which was hooked up to an old web server i use for testing, so that i still mess around with it using my wife's laptop when i had reason to. i had some security enabled on it, but less than any of the other access points in range from my unit.
i never looked at the logs that close to really see if anyone had tried, but it was amusing to imagine somebody's frustration after successfully hacking in and then finding out that they didn't have access to anything useful.
when i finally got cable, i added mac filters to the configuration, just in case.
If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
"2206 Swede". Yes, an unsecured AP, named after the person's address.
I am scientifically inaccurate.
Found as an SSID in Eugene, Oregon during a wardrive. No, it wasn't my doing.
Incidentally, a kind neighbor with "linksys" provides me with free broadband. Wonder how long it'll be before someone discovers it and actually changes the password on the AP.
"Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
Pirating Microsoft Office eh?
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
I encountered the SSID "MyBallsHurtFromTheHerpes"
saw this one as I was driving around the u-district in seattle.
— darco
Our (rather secure) network in this house of 4 people and 7 computers is: nerdmobile. Problem is, nobody can remember if we meant it to be nerd-mobile (like Mobile Home) or nerdmobile (like a thing a nerd would drive).
Disabling SSID broadcast doesn't prevent somebody from seeing your SSID. The SSID is in every frame, so it's not like you're preventing anybody with a sniffer from seeing the SSID. Furthermore, they don't even need your SSID to connect to you, as on most systems, the "ANY" SSID will allow association unless your AP had the ability to disable that.
All disabling SSID broadcast will do is to prevent your SSID from showing up in Windows little list of "available networks". This might prevent the little old lady next door from connecting to your system by accident, but it does absolutely nothing in terms of security.
- Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
I like "FBI-STING" I bet that will scare them away
Danger Will Robinson! You are now entering a condescending Unix user zone!
Has anyone ever considered configuring an old AP with an SSID like "Starbucks SUX0RS" and plugging it in and hiding it in said establishment? I have not done it personally and I am not advocating doing this, just curious.
personal attacks hurt, especially when deserved
My old roommate moved into a large house recently, and was having some reception problems in the upper floors, so he hacked his firmware to boost the power to 150 mW. Then he added an antenna that he calculates should amplify it to over 4 Watts. We're fairly sure that he should be getting reception for 1/4 mile to a mile horizontally now, so he decided to play with the wardrivers trying to figure out where his base station is, and name it "clitoris". I'm personally waiting to see how long until he gets a knock on the door from the FCC.
WARNING: there is a trojan on your
At Robocup 2004 in Lisbon, there were a lot of teams that arrived late to the competition. Many of us had booked our flights on Continental, and we had all been delayed by bad weather in Newark. Thus, when I was setting up our team's wireless network and noticed that there was already one called "FuckContinental", I nearly died laughing.
"StopLookingAtMySSID"? I've seen it, no lie.
Premature optimization is the root of all evil
My SSID is Hail Mary (flyin through the air). The home network is Gridiron. The main PC I use is HeadCoach, the Linux Web Server is PlayBook. The Laptop is WideReceiver, and the secondary PC is QuarterBack. I plan to set up a cluster named after O linemen.
You just need to sniff some traffic with some tool for sniffing traffic, link Ethereal, and you will get a valid and allowed MAC address.
My mom recently asked for a wireless setup at her house - I thought the SSID "TadCockjockeysWirelessBonanza" was interesting enough. The network is as secured as it can be, and I'll admit I'm a little disappointed that it doesn't appear that anyone has even tried to access it - I suppose there aren't enough Bible quotes in it to attract the attention of central Nebraska residents.
americans are stupid
blairbitches (They are one Blair Street)
useme4free
Pimp Shack
FuckOFF
--fatboy
I swear my neighbors were watching me move into my apartment when they named their AP. The stairs were VERY icy and I was lucky to not DIE falling down them. The first thing I did was look for free wifi (of course) and found it rather amusing when the first AP was "TripAndFall"
The application was a metering system for a Coffee Shop. You would show up, try to access the net, and would be greeted by a message telling you to see the person at the counter to activate your connection.
"Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
--Dr.W.Edwards Deming
ElectricLadyLAN pooppoint Neither had WEP. I got an IP from the first, but didn't keep it long enough to try surfing.
I was staying with a guy who lived near a large computer company's regional office. He secured it and set up the SSID to look like one of theirs -14A253 or something like that. He thought it would be fun to see who tried to break in.
There is one around here which probably represents the barest minimum of efforts as the SSID set to: asdf-ghjk
It is WEP-protected, but I'm not holding my breath on key security.
Truth be told, it's the Coyote who was my favorite. What an embodyment of the engineering can do. No matter how many anvils get dropped on your head, keep plugging away at a solution.
At the same time, what an embodyment of the problems of the engineering mindset! No matter how many times it blows up in your face, keep plugging away at ever more elaborate technical solutions.
"Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
--Dr.W.Edwards Deming
This sounds like a question one would see from an avid Ask Marilyn reader.
Another favorite: In order to solve global warming, why doesn't everyone turn on their air conditioners and open their windows.
She didn't have an answer for that reader. I don't know if she didn't answer it because 1) it was a stupid question that any high-school physics student should be able to answer or 2) she had no clue.
--Mike
This doesn't really count as an interesting SSID, but I think its a good idea at least:
I use "PUBLIC" as part of the SSID for my public hotspots. So, for instance, one of them is "SYMBIO-PUBLIC". That is to make it clear that it is a public hotspot that I have freely made open and available to anyone to use.
My ISP allows me to share my bandwidth, and I've taken precautions to limit the use of my public hotspots to low-priority bandwidth levels as well as limiting access to safe ports and such (don't need anyone setting up a spam machine via wifi!).
If everyone with the intention of giving away free bandwidth did this then it would help clarify whether open-hotspots are that way intentionally or (as is much more often the case) the hotspot provider is just a clueless newbie.
my fave...
All true wisdom can be found in sigs.
The network continues to be up, well exceeding the average 24-hour lifespan of the yard signs.
- First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
My own is shaddupfoo. The mexicans down the street use "Paco" and one of the local churches uses praisejesus. Some of the local buisinesses are rather amusing too, such as "circlek" at a dairy mart, a nod to the mart in Bill & Ted's Excellent adventure. Then there are several ones called "secure" which are anything but.
Netgear seems to have the shortest average ranges, picking up only when I'm almost on top of them. Spectrum has the longest, with a Spectrum24 my former roomate got off of ebay going almost two blocks from the house.
--Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
The best SSID I have seen while war driving waa in dimondbar CA was ILIKEANALSEX Probably someone messing with an insecure access point.
Using "" on my AP seems to leave kismet users frustrated as to why they can't sniff out any broadcast association requests :)
I just don't broadcast my SSID. Why bother?
Where I live, in the middle of nowhere, my linksys router can't even break my property line from my house (hell, I'm connected via Direcway, ugh). I lovingly named the AP 'plzsniffme' and put no encryption/authentication/security of any kind on it, although it does make log entries for mac addresses not in a very short list.
um... how the hell is that offtopic?
I use '***ERROR***' on mine, and a wardriving friend found 'Close_the_POD_bay_doors_HAL!'.
I wonder if you can use some combination of NULLs, spaces, and backspaces... hmmmm
- OrbNobz
"My walnuts!!!" - GIR
One of my friends recently moved into a brand-new, massive condo development. The condos themselves are pretty big, but everything is really crammed in. In the first days of moving in, he set up his WAP with the SSID of "parking sucks". A few days later, another network popped up called "NO_KIDDING".
Mr. Spleen
that ought to make sure there's no hackers to be found anywhere near it...
"You want a toe? I can get you a toe by three o'clock... with nail polish."
FuckOffYou, unsecured residential AP
-- Sean Chittenden
SSID: hacmeidareu
Must-not-watch TV!
I don't see how it is a problem to use a street address as an SSID. If somebody wants to figure out what house the AP is in, all it takes is a Pringles can (or less) and a couple dollars in parts. They can then look at the numbers on the front of the house, and they have the exact same information as before. I know what house every AP in my neighborhood belongs to, without even using directional antennas. I have spoken with their owners (was helping resolve interference problems in the neighborhood) and confirmed my guesses. If you don't want anyone finding out what house has the wireless AP, you probably shouldn't use wireless equipment in that house.
Using the address, or a phone number, or even both as I do, makes it very easy to get in contact with the owner should the need arise. If an AP is malfunctioning or misconfigured and is causing interference, the owner should be contacted and informed.
The other reason I have my phone number in mine is because if someone else wants to use it, they can. I don't want Johnny Scriptkiddy driving through and screwing with it. But if a neighbor has a guest staying who wants to use my wireless, that is fine. Long and short of it, if someone has the decency to call and ask permission, I will give them my WPA key. My AP is on a separate subnet and requires VPN to access my wired network, so I don't mind giving local people access. Without VPN, all they can do is browse the web and check e-mail.
No matter how you look at it, using wireless has some risks to it. The best way the average home user can protect themselves is to enable WEP (or WPA if available) and lock down the MAC addresses. Using an accurate and descriptive SSID is not a risk, and can actually be very helpfull. Turning off SSID broadcast does absolutely no good and can cause additional problems.
Advanced users and corporate users obviously have more options available to them, but out-of-the-box configuration options are adequate for home users as long as they configure them.
Jeremy
Ha
I named mine to Linkski
I helped a friend once, so I set all his stuff up the same as mine. He still can't say linksys he always calls it a linkski.
See the Pictures of the Flood of '08
"ACCESS DENIED" for the 802.11b
and
"NETWORK UNAVAILABLE" for the 802.11g
Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachtani?
www.fogbound.net
Shortly after I moved in, I noticed a wireless network named "Glenn" running totally open and unencrypted. I joined it, hit http://192.168.0.1, and sure enough the login and password were "admin" and "1234" respectively. Eight months later, that network is still named "Glenn-please-secure-me."
Doh! Did I just see my SSID on /.'s front page? Time to change it I guess.
This name works great for my SSID. People avoid like, well, the plague.
Take off every Sig. For great justice.
So when you see a fairly new SSID of "2Wire" in nieghborhood it shouldn't be open unless the owner went out the way to make it that way.
Alas, it's only 64 bit WEP and it doesn't have WPA or MAC address filtering that I could find. It'll do for the GF until she gets her new iMac and AirPort this week after which I'll disable WiFi on the 2Wire.
Ever dream you could fly? Get up from the Flight Sim. I Fly
my now husband proposed by getting me to demonstrate an ap he 'set up for me'. i showed people kismet, and wham, up came ssid "will_you_marry_me". i look at him, and hes holding a ring, and saying, yep, its for real....:)
ok, i'm so geek i think it was romantic:)
Nothing - well thats something.
Open networks mean more spam, more viruses, and more "admins" (who don't know the first thing about security) getting blamed for all of the above.
What they know now is that they weren't secure and that they should care about it. There is NO other effective way of telling someone these things. They will either ignore you, assume that you're wrong about them being insecure, or assume that being insecure isn't a bad thing.
Remember the slashdot article about someone's dad who didn't care about any of the reasons for using firefox, including security? I'm sure he didn't understand why that is socially irresponsible.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
I have two access points, one fully open, no wep, NAT over one public IP, and fully firewalled from my network except for my dns servers (dhcp runs on the access point)
:)
:(
SSID is
The other access point is closed via LEAP, different private IP block, also firewalled as above except this one allows access to the IP address of my VPN gateway machine, and does not do NAT.
SSID is
Both SSIDs are broadcast out of course.
Was out w/ my laptop about a week ago, and saw a SSID that was "S3CuR3N3TW0RK". Needless to say, it wasn't WEP encrypted
LAN_Ho
Dirty_Sanchez
LAN_DownUnder
I had a ssid for a while of A205_$key. My Apartment was A205 and the $key was my WEP key. I did have my wireless on a seperate VLAN and VPN'd back if I wanted to check something on the wired VLAN. I did not care if someone used my wireless as I had most traffic ACL'd off. All you had was recieveing mail, web, ssh and telnet open for public use.
Ours is called "we can see you from up here".
'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
My SSID is "mars network, open for all". I have more bandwidth than I can use; why not share it?
is 'thereisalotofwifihere' since from my couch I can see 15 other AP's on a good day and 5-7 on a quiet day. A few months ago I noticed a new AP in my building 'youknowit' and most recently 'yeaitssilly'.
:wq
I agree with you on free access.
Broadband is no longer something that I could live without. DSL is not offered in my area, which is right outside downtown Salt Lake City.
The response from teleco was that I am "40 feet too far away, but you can get IDSL (128/128) for $130 a month."
If I could not get Comcast Cable service here, I would be getting a high gain antenna, and a 802.takeyourpick network card, and connect to an open access point, sniff some traffic to determine the owner, send them an email or stop by their door and ask if I can use it.
http://www.fsckin.com/
I get better reception to the people next door than through my floor downstairs. Hence I find myself connecting frequently to "SlapABitch"
That's a good one...
My best, obviously set up by the teenage male in the family:
ssidisgayashell
128 bit WEP, but the encryption key was 'ssidisgayashe', so it wasn't hard to break into....
"City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
Once I saw a wireless access point named... yes, Uranus. I can actually post the netstumber log if anybody cares.
"Give a man a fire, he's warm for a day, set a man on fire, he's warm for life."
Exactly. And if you set your SSID to "default" or "router", and actually do secure the thing heavily, then you cause a lot of grief for weenies who think they can get free access. :-)
Karma: It's all a bunch of tree-huggin' hippy crap!
While riding next to a limo, kismet picked up "limoman" To this day I wonder if that limo company offered some sort of wireless access in their limos.
On the same trip I found "IPROSECUTEFORWIFITHEFT" or something pretty close to that. I can not remember anymore it was 3 years ago, but I laughed when I saw it. BTW, it was OPEN, no WEP. :)
Windows is not the answer.
Windows is the question.
The answer is "NO."
Found while walking around a housing complex at my university.
--
SuperCalendar.com - Web calendar with RSS, AIM/SMS notifications, and more.
SuperCalendar.com - Web calendar with RSS, AIM/SMS notific
It is surprising how effective it is.
... access to my isp, but blind to the internal network.
I actually have 2 set up, One named "HAVE_AT" on the old "b" gear, with wide open http ftp,
I also have a wide open "g" ap named "LOGGED" over which I run a real VPN for my internal network. I allow open access on the HAVE_AT to anyone as long as the bandwidth isn't in the way. If it is, I just shut it off. Besides, the
logs make interesting reading.
So far, no-one has had more than a passing interest in the LOGGED network.
It works for me.
F X=0:1:9999 F D=2:1 Q:((X>2)&(X#D=0)!((D>X/2)&(X'=1))) I D>(X/2) W:$X>75 ! W X,?$X+5-$l(X) Q
I've set my SSID to "call (my phone number)" and leave WEP off. But then my WAP is on the outside of my NAT router, on its own IP address. As with yours, all they can do is internet and soforth, not play with my machines. I have my WAP set to email me access logs periodically, and so far I've only seen one foreign MAC in the logs, and I have yet to get a phonecall. But then I'm in an "old" neighborhood, not too many grannies with wifi cards around here I guess.
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
I like my own SSID: "SphinctorNET". It used to the name of my dialup connection at home. We all used to say "its so crappy and useless!", and thats where the name started.
Had to laugh hard stumbling upon that one...
hay what's going on in this ssid
:)
I prefer a void in conversation to a vacuous one.
Ok, I gotcha.... Yeah, for some dumb reason, I forgot all about that possibility.
Again, I may be wrong here, but I *think* most of these routers still issue IPs in a different range via DHCP to their wireless clients than to their wired ones? I recall mine giving my wireless connections IPs in the 192.168.1.x range while actual wired LAN connected clients were given 192.168.0.x range IPs.
Not like it'd be hard to just set up a static address on your PC for the purpose of hacking in, but at least it wouldn't happen by pure accident with this configuration.
The mac address give away the manufacturer as well, and that can't be changed.
Wow, remind me never to make obscure Kurt Vonnegut references on here ever again. One AC with no mod points seems to have gotten it, and two people thought the base "1" rating for my post was overrated :(
BTW you play q3? I had a guy called moomin once train me up...
or maybe CS? as this guy called moomin came into our lan gaming center and owned EVERYONE on the stats for way over a month.
- http://www.milkme.co.uk
I was setting up a wireless laptop yesterday and immediately found "JPs Bitchin' Broadband" which was secured and "linksys" which was not.
Allen Tate Computing Services
http://www.allentatecomputing.com/
IMHO, IANAL, TINLA, etc...
would it take to cover my entire house?
The myth around broadcasting SSID's
The SSID will be found anyway. I would not advise anyone to rely on hiding it for any form of security. C'mon - lots of sensible progress in wireless security these days, or go that wee bit further and use IPSec or something strong.
You guys do all use a firewall to segregate wireless networks from your home network, right?