• @Avatar_of_Self
    link
    English
    -124 days ago

    If it doesn’t have the passphrase for wifi, how is it going to connect? I rarely see unsecured wifis around neighborhoods anymore. For copper/fiber, you’re not going to hook it up to keep it disocnnected.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      324 days ago

      It’s not that simple.

      Here’s an example: Amazon could outfit all of their delivery vehicles with open wifi networks. Every Alexa device calls home when a truck drives by.

      Here’s another: you may have a guest wifi, or your neighbor, or their neighbor. All it needs is one.

      Yeah of course there are solutions to faraday cage it away from the world. But all they need is one connection. You have to stop it forever.

      • @Avatar_of_Self
        link
        English
        1
        edit-2
        24 days ago

        Guest wifi does not mean it is unsecure, it is simply just another logical network. Sure amazon could equip their trucks with wifi I suppose and maybe some TVs would have good connection to update fast enough while a truck is there without a lot of tcp retransmits due to lack of efficient lack of penetration but that’s not going effect all brands and surely it isn’t something that is currently happening in a large effect.

        You could talk about hypotheticals in the future sure but they aren’t going to scan for these magical “network ports” that are just hanging around the ether. It needs to have a connection and one that is reasonable in quality and time.

    • @Plopp
      link
      English
      124 days ago

      If it doesn’t have the passphrase for wifi

      Open networks have no passphrase. Otherwise they wouldn’t be open. And yes they’re less common but it doesn’t mean you’re neighbor can’t set one up at any given time.