Hacking A Secure Wireless Network
There are numerous ways to hack a secure wireless connection; likewise there are numerous reasons why people try to hack these connections. Sadly most of the time when a wireless connection is hacked it is for illegal activities such as accessing back accounts, downloading pirated music or movies, trafficking pornography or identity theft. Securing your wireless internet connection is one way to prevent these things from happening through your internet connection. Regardless of whether or not you are aware of your security level of your wireless internet connection, you could be held responsible for activity that occurs on your IP address.
Hacking into a secure wireless network can take as little as fifteen seconds; if you broadcast your SSID (Service Set IDentifier) it makes it an even easier task to hack a wireless connection. Hackers can get around minimal amounts of security by using a WLAN sniffer program that reads signals that are they are transmitted and received. To prevent access to a secure wireless network you should choose to use a WPA, Wi-Fi Protected Access, instead of Wired Equivalency Privacy (WEP) because the WPA allows you to use a wider array of letter and numbers in your password thus making it harder to crack a secure wireless network.
What can happen if you leave your wireless connection unsecured? First it is an open invitation for people to use your signal when they are roaming. That will lead to a slower connection for you and free internet access for them. Second, it could compromise your personal data and information. While a remote take over of your desktop or laptop computer is rare, it is a golden opportunity for a hacker to deposit a Trojan that could later be activated to execute a program, run a script or perform illegal actions. Another way to hack into a secure wireless network is to exploit the remote administration option.
Hacking secure wireless network message boards exist to trade information amongst hackers but are often monitored by the FCC and other law enforcement agencies. Only a small portion of the information posted about "How To Hack Secure Wireless Networks" message and bulletin boards is understandable or decipherable due to codes, backchatting and locked boards. Exchanging information, programs (also called "proggies"), scripts, viruses and Trojans is vital to hackers as well as those who engage in phishing.
Having a secured wireless connection does not insure that your internet access is safe. You should check your setting, password, administration levels and internet traffic on a regular basis. If you have a limited amount of data transfer per month and suddenly get messages from your internet provider that you have gone over your limit, there is a very good chance that someone found a way to crack your secure wireless network. Testing your system or having someone else test it from a remote location is also an excellent way to make sure that you deny access a secure wireless network.
If you want to learn how to crack a secure wireless network there are magazines like Underground 411 and Blacklisted 411 that provide advanced hackers information about new techniques as well as experimental processes that users are developing. Since these are publications that have questionable material in them, most are offered as subscriptions only as retail bookstores will not carry them. Both magazines sponsor or advertise monthly meeting spots for hackers; these are monitored by several state and federal offices. Unlike message boards and web sites that can be shut down in a matter of seconds, publications like Underground and Blacklisted provide a hard copy for hackers and information about how to crack a secure wireless network.
