Ask Slashdot: Best Way To Leave My Router Open?
generalhavok writes "I read the story on Slashdot earlier about the EFF encouraging people to leave their WiFi open to share the internet. I would like to do this! I don't mind sharing my connection and letting my neighbors check their email or browse the web. However, when I used to leave it open, I quickly found my limited bandwidth dissappearing, as my neighbors started using it heavily by streaming videos, downloading large files, and torrenting. What is an easy way I can share my internet, while enforcing some limits so there is enough bandwidth left for me? What about separating the neighbors from my internal home network? Can this be done with consumer-grade routers? If the average consumer wants to share, what's the easiest and safest way to do it?"
Wasn't it just this week that we had the lovely account of someone getting the SWAT treatment just for leaving their router free and open?
It can get you in to trouble
That said, I leave my wifi router open as well, but if you're going to do it you have to do it knowing the risks. Being accused of kiddie porn, for instance, is going to stick with you forever, regardless of guilt or innocence.
Yes, and locks can be picked, so it's useless to use locks on doors too! (You aren't stupid enough to lock your door are you?)
I hate that argument. Even a weak lock is a lock which says "unauthorized not welcome." And MAC address filtering requires that someone knows what a MAC address is and how to change theirs. You have to admit, this is not "casual technical knowledge." True what you say, but that depends mostly on what demographic you are speaking about. If you are talking about your average Facebook/twitter/Youtube user on the net, you'd basically be wrong.
MAC filters, hidden SSID
Those don't do anything. MACs can be found by outsiders not connected to your network despite how encrypted the network is. Hidden SSIDs aren't anything either. The same tools that will display the MACs will also show all hidden SSIDs within range.
Sure, they block the average user, but anyone who wants to get in will have no trouble at all.
and what is the benefit again?
Living in the kind of world where other people might do the same for you.
DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!