From now on, I’m not even connecting to the families home WiFi

  • radix
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    51 year ago

    The first thing that comes to mind is keeping the default credentials for router settings.

    • @Usernamealreadyinuse
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      1 year ago

      I feel like a boomer, but why is this dangerous? Why is the default randomised string of numbers, letters and special characters easier to guess than if I generate an other random string?

      • @Cypher
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        51 year ago

        On older models these often weren’t randomised, even now that they are on most models the passwords tend to be short which is easier to brute force.

        If you’re using your ISP’s supplied router they, and anyone who compromises your ISP, potentially have a back door into your router.

        I recommend pfsense routers. It’s open source, has features missing on practically all consumer routers and they’re very reliable.

      • radix
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        1 year ago

        I meant things like admin/admin. I didn’t know they come with randomly generated codes now; that’s good! Even so, as @[email protected] said, the rules by which these codes were generated might be online (like if you search up “[router name] manual”), permitting a targeted brute-force attack maybe.