- Most things that you connect to the web through your home WiFi are probably okay: Your router kills most incoming hacking attempts.
- "Hacking or even 'piggybacking' on an open WiFi connection is -Redacted- in a wide variety of nations," Loek Essers wrote.
- And, as for the issue of children racking up bills on their parents' Kindles: Amazon has no added a password lock for WiFi access. Amazon doesn't mention any WiFi fixes -- a particularly annoying issue for a device that only runs on WiFi.
- And thatās an everyday occurrence, and thereās wifi in the airport, and I can use my phone and laptop the entire time, and thereās wifi on the plane.
- But anything users can do over WiFi cuts into the necessity to buy plans with a lot of data or with any standard minutes, especially as WiFi becomes an ever-present option.
- 1 - DISABLE CELLULAR DATA AND 3G AND WIFI - 2 - TURN ON YOUR WIFI ONLY!
- āWe talked about hacking, whether it's Chinese hacking or purported Russian hacking.ā She may also have been referring to prior cases of U.S.
- I would refer you to a paper that my colleague Ben Buchanan and I wrote just before the election called āHacking Chads,ā where we tried to make this distinction just as you did between hacking the voters and hacking the voting, to put it crudely.
- Presumably the "improvements in performance" will address some of that speed stuff, but nowhere in there does it guarantee a Web browsing fix and there's no mention of WiFi -- kind of a big problem for a tablet that has no 3G capabilities and just relies on WiFi to get users connected.
- Presumably the "improvements in performance" will address some of that speed stuff, but nowhere in there does it guarantee a Web browsing fix and there's no mention of WiFi -- kind of a big problem for a tablet that has no 3G capabilities and just relies on WiFi to get users connected.
- -- Also, Consumer Watchdog will unveil which home WiFi network set up by a member of Congress it successfully penetrated (or probed) tomorrow, as part of a protest against Google Street View's WiFi gathering practices.
- I've spent the past few hours getting to and sitting in the San Diego airport, where the wifi coverage (like most provided across the country by the AWG company, in my experience) goes off and on, and am about to spend the rest of the day and evening aboard an airplane -- which, because it's a United B-737, means it has no wifi.
- What reason would you have to leave? What has coffee locavores scared is that all these upgrades, along with the mounting aggression against WiFi users from mom and pop shops, will eventually put smaller shops without WiFi out of business.
- I worked avionics and fly by wire systems and missile technology for 16 years and switched to embedded systems, gps and wireless telemetry (no not wifi, wifi is for pussies) for the past 10 with a emphasis on extreme ruggedization.
- some of these distinctions are subtle, while others are profound enough to warrant thinking about hacking in terms of genres or genealogies of hacking -- and we compare and contrast various of these genealogies in the class, such as free and open source software hacking and the hacker underground.