All Your Wifi Are Belong To Us

Wireless internet access has been around for many years.
We take it for-granted.

You can sit in the comfort of your arm chair and surf the web.
It’s great. We love it!

If you’ve had wireless for a while you may want to check what type of encryption is on your wireless access point.

WEP, also know as wired equivalent privacy was one of the first ways of connecting yourself via the air and is still used today in many modern routers.

It has never really been the most secure way to connect wireless and many linux tools have developed over the years to crack WEP keys if you know what you are doing in linux shell.

Today we see many applications and hardware emerging that will retrieve a WEP key within minutes making your wireless network accessible to anyone who knows how to push a few buttons.

Like you, we know how to push buttons. So we downloaded software freely available on the internet to crack our own wireless access point. The WEP 64 bit key was recovered within 2 minutes.

If you have a wireless access point and it is secured with WEP 64 bit or 128 bit – do yourself a favour and use a higher level of encryption such as WPA.

 

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Fall in love with Web SDR

Happy Valentines day, What’s a web SDR?

For you radio lovers – It stands for Web Software-Defined Radio receiver.

What is so special about this little number is that she is multi-band and multi-user unlike most we’ve seen on the internet. You’ll fall in love instantly with her. We guarantee!!

WebSDR was first conceived as a means to make the 25 m radio telescope at Dwingeloo available to many radio amateurs for EME reception.

In order to test a preliminary version of the software without using the 25m dish, a shortwave WebSDR was set up on Christmas Eve 2007 at the radio club of the University of Twente. After further development, its existence was publicly announced in April 2008.

Interest for the project has been large since then, and many amateurs worldwide have expressed an interest in setting up their own WebSDR server. In November 2008, a beta testing phase has started with a few selected stations.

A WebSDR server consists of a PC running Linux and the WebSDR server software, a fast internet connection (several hundred kbit/s uplink bandwidth per listener), and some radio hardware to feed antenna signals into the PC. This radio hardware is typically a quadrature mixer connected to the PC’s soundcard, like the popular SoftRock kits.

On this page you can listen to and control a short-wave receiver located at the amateur radio club ETGD at the University of Twente. In contrast to other web-controlled receivers, this receiver can be tuned by multiple users simultaneously, thanks to the use of Software-Defined Radio.

Note: you need both Java and JavaScript enabled for this page to work properly. If you don’t hear anything, probably Java is disabled in your browser’s settings, is not installed at all, is a too old version, or is not functioning properly.  The setup is rather experimental, and neither continuous service nor good performance are guaranteed.

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