German Court Says Secure Your Wi-Fi or Get Fined

Status
Not open for further replies.

nawat

Distinguished
Jan 2, 2006
38
0
18,530
[citation][nom]xbeater[/nom]unless you live in the middle of nowhere, it is stupid not to secure your network.[/citation]
I believe all of us have secured our wireless network. This mainly applies to people who are less tech savvy and just getting the wireless to work for them is already a difficult task not to mention securing it.

I hope the process to set up and secure wireless network gets easy enough for most users. I just found out that one of my friends still uses default SSID, router IP address, router password, with DHCP turned on, and without encrpytion. You know what that means. I could hear the router screaming "hack me."
 

peanutsrevenge

Distinguished
Dec 7, 2007
28
0
18,530
This is great in theory, but I'm an IT techy that works in peoples houses and ALOT haven't a clue even how to access their router, let alone anything about wireless security.

Still it's far better than the UKs new Digital Economy Bill where the connection owner IS responsible for what the connection's used for.

I wonder how this law will effect plublic connections where the key's given out to customers (Libaries, cafes, schools etc).
 

CTPAHHIK

Distinguished
Jul 21, 2008
80
0
18,640
Another law that does not make much sense, yet limits your freedom. If you are not liable for your wireless content people can claim that their wireless was protected, but hacked and used for file sharing.

I do not block anyone from my router; however, I do try to block all possible file sharing ports for non-static routes and have uPnP disabled. If explicitly set your firewall on home PC to block all non-static IP addressed within your DHCP pool your home PC will never be discovered.

On the other note, it really sux when people block all access to wireless. When I travel there is a lot of access points, but all of them are either secured or charge for access. In the end I have to pay $15 (hotel charge) to check my email or place a call to relatives. I'm sure there are neighbors around you that do not have high speed internet and would not mind using your occasionally. Do not assume that everyone will run torrents, try to hack or abuse your internet.
 

Kryan

Distinguished
Oct 23, 2008
233
0
18,680
Living in Germany and having leeched off plenty of Open, unsecured routers, I can say that this is a good idea. However, as pointed out, 95% of the people don't even understand what their router is there for. "it's like a modem...connected to my laptop...and it just...works."

see?

The government is doing this to try and make some cash back after bailing out that ............. in eastern europe: Greece. man the E.U is so fail right now.

(buy gold while u can!!!! especially you americans!)
 

stromm

Distinguished
Jun 23, 2004
162
0
18,680
Ohio has had a similar since (IIRC) 2001. There was a big bust of a pedophile in my neighborhood (who I helped catch) and he was floating around on other peoples WiFi and a few ignorant people were fined for allowing open access to illegal content.
 
[citation][nom]Marco925[/nom]WEP is probably what most people will put on, it's so easy to crack. i don't think it will slow down or deter wardrivers.[/citation] I agree that WEP is easy to crack. However, by cracking it, it proves malicious intent and further absolves the owner of the wireless router from legal action.
 

scott_madison1

Distinguished
Apr 27, 2010
58
0
18,630
[citation][nom]nawat[/nom]I believe all of us have secured our wireless network. This mainly applies to people who are less tech savvy and just getting the wireless to work for them is already a difficult task not to mention securing it.I hope the process to set up and secure wireless network gets easy enough for most users. I just found out that one of my friends still uses default SSID, router IP address, router password, with DHCP turned on, and without encrpytion. You know what that means. I could hear the router screaming "hack me."[/citation]

I did that to teach my nephew a lesson one time because he did the same thing. He spent 4 hours on the phone with the isp trying to figure out why it wasn't working. When he found out what I'd done, he sure was ...............!
 

heffeque

Distinguished
Dec 9, 2002
181
0
18,680
[citation][nom]xbeater[/nom]unless you live in the middle of nowhere, it is stupid not to secure your network.[/citation]
Interestingly enough, some people actually LIKE to share their internet connection with society. I know several people that have their internet connection with two SSID, a protected private one and an open public one (it's really easy to do with DD-WRT). The open one is set to have minimum priority in QoS and all is good.

Not everyone is as greedy as you are it seems.
 

Camikazi

Distinguished
Jul 20, 2008
1,405
2
19,315
[citation][nom]CTPAHHIK[/nom]Another law that does not make much sense, yet limits your freedom. If you are not liable for your wireless content people can claim that their wireless was protected, but hacked and used for file sharing. I do not block anyone from my router; however, I do try to block all possible file sharing ports for non-static routes and have uPnP disabled. If explicitly set your firewall on home PC to block all non-static IP addressed within your DHCP pool your home PC will never be discovered. On the other note, it really sux when people block all access to wireless. When I travel there is a lot of access points, but all of them are either secured or charge for access. In the end I have to pay $15 (hotel charge) to check my email or place a call to relatives. I'm sure there are neighbors around you that do not have high speed internet and would not mind using your occasionally. Do not assume that everyone will run torrents, try to hack or abuse your internet.[/citation]
Unless those people who want to connect to my net are gonna pay me I will not allow my router to be open, just like I won't let just anyone enter my house unless I know them or am renting an apartment. I don't trust random strangers at all, cause I don't know their intentions and will not get in trouble cause of them, my router stays locked at all times.
 

jellico

Distinguished
Apr 17, 2009
622
0
18,980
[citation][nom]chunkymonster[/nom]I agree that WEP is easy to crack. However, by cracking it, it proves malicious intent and further absolves the owner of the wireless router from legal action.[/citation]
Cracking a network, in an of itself, does NOT prove malicious intent. Lots of us do penetration testing, and have no ill-designs on the networks we crack. It's actually kind of fun to see how quickly you can breech a network.
 

sot010174

Distinguished
Mar 12, 2004
89
0
18,630
What I don't get is why won't Linksys, D-link and whatever sell their routers with security already enabled with a random password printed on the bottom of the router? Job done!
 

HalJordan

Distinguished
Jul 16, 2009
257
0
18,780
[citation][nom]Marco925[/nom]WEP is probably what most people will put on, it's so easy to crack. i don't think it will slow down or deter wardrivers.[/citation]

True, but why hack when the culprit can just drive down the road a little farther to find more unsecured routers. From my home I could hit up at least 3 unsecured routers. Poor security is better than no security. /shrug
 

cadder

Distinguished
Nov 17, 2008
1,711
1
19,865
I've had people come to my house and want to get on my wifi, but can't because of the security. People who aren't as good as some of us have trouble typing in a 40 character password and getting it right the first time, or second or third times, and eventually they give up.

I'm on my 3rd home router now, and we have our second or 3rd router at work. Each time we have to learn a different system of accessing the router, setting passwords for the router itself, and then entering WEP or WPA passwords. Then on top of that at home I've got 5 wireless devices that we have to change. This would all be a little easier if the manufacturers would standardize a little bit on how their routers work.
 

jryan388

Distinguished
Nov 1, 2009
1,342
0
19,460
My brother-in-law was trying to fix my grandmother's router one day, and accidentally signed into a neighbor's router and renamed it with a new password without realizing.
 

terr281

Distinguished
Dec 22, 2008
261
0
18,790
[citation][nom]CTPAHHIK[/nom]... On the other note, it really sux when people block all access to wireless. ... I'm sure there are neighbors around you that do not have high speed internet and would not mind using your occasionally. Do not assume that everyone will run torrents, try to hack or abuse your internet.[/citation]

This is precisely the reason that I had to turn off the wireless portion of our home's router. I live in a rural area of the US that is slowly becoming suburban. Bellsouth finally got around to giving the area DSL (the only high speed internet option without horrible latency, IE: satellite) a few years ago. The connections were "sold out" before it was even officially released.

I was one of the few people that got access, and upgraded our home from a 100Mb to 1Gb network. (Wireless router/switch, an add-on switch, Cat5e instead of a mix of recycled Cat3 & 5 cable.) I properly secured the router, and all was good. That was, until I began to notice that... even when my work laptop was not powered on, someone was using the wireless. I spoke to all of my neighbours, none of which were using it OR even knew "you could access the internet anyway other than with a modem."

So, I disabled the wireless availability of the router. (However, I retained the information the router had regarding the offending device.)

I know some people that have said, quote: "Why should I pay for internet when my neighbours have it?" The answer is simple. At least in my area, it is illegal for you to use another's wireless without their permission. A simple enough reason for me... but not for many people these days...
 

starryman

Distinguished
Mar 9, 2009
335
0
18,780
Germany next week will pass the following laws:

1. $300 fine if you don't lock your house doors.
2. $200 fine for not flushing the toilet.
3. $140 for not having the password prompt when you start Windows.
4. $25 for not tying your shoe lace.
5. $5 for right-clicking your mouse if you are using a Mac.
6. $40 for not having your daily beer.
7. $30 for not slugging the next person when they see a VW.
 

jlehew

Distinguished
Oct 30, 2009
5
0
18,510
Silly lawyers. Just because there is a password doesn't mean it is secure. Type WEP and Hack into Google and you'll find many YouTube videos on how to do it in 10 minutes or less. Everyone will need a strong password and a secure protocol before it will be secure. And if this becomes law I wonder what fees providers will charge to reset your password if you forget!!

 

Kelavarus

Distinguished
Sep 7, 2009
510
0
18,980
[citation][nom]jellico[/nom]Cracking a network, in an of itself, does NOT prove malicious intent. Lots of us do penetration testing, and have no ill-designs on the networks we crack. It's actually kind of fun to see how quickly you can breech a network.[/citation]

I reeeaaally don't think that's going to hold up in court very well though.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.