Sunday, May 18, 2008

5 Ways To Keep People From Stealing Your Broadband

Let's get one thing straight up front: at some time or another, we have all used someone else's wireless connection to check our email, get directions, or find something entertaining during a less than exciting vacation.

With that being said, there are others who abuse the privilege: The college student next door who decides to use your connection to download hi-def porn. The tweenager who has to have that bootleg Miley Cyrus album. A novice hacker who decides it would be fun to use your gateway for some "exploration".

In this article, I will give you a few steps that will help you reclaim your bandwidth, make your network more secure, and give freeloaders the boot.

1. Change the default username and password on your router.

Many security problems start with the fact that most people don't know how to log into their router to start with.

First, you must open up your browser, and type the IP 192.168.0.1 (or 192.168.1.1 for linksys routers).

It will bring up the login screen automatically. All manufacturers have a default password. For example, dlink's default username is "admin" and the password is left blank.

Check your user manual or the underside of your router for your manufacturer's defaults.

Go the administrative or settings tab once you have logged in, and change it to whatever you would like. Change the username to something unrelated to your first or last name. Try to add a password that has at least one number in it.

Don't forget to change the "user" username and password as well. While you cannot change anything while logged in as "user", this can let experienced freeloaders see your settings, and find a backdoor more easily.

2. Change your SSID.

What is an SSID? In layman's terms, it is your router name. The router will usually come defaulted to the name of the manufacturer, and when the SSID is "Belkin54G", it screams "free internet access". Change it to something boring, and unexciting. This is not time to play "Pimp Your SSID". An unusual or exciting name will automatically attract freeloaders. You can usually find this in the "settings" tab as well.

3. Create a WPA Key

This is simply an 8-63 character password that is stored on your router. In order for anyone to access your connection, they must first type in the correct password. To set up your WPA key, log in to your router. Once there, select the "wireless" tab. Then, enable encryption.

If there are two types of WPA, select "WPA-PSK". This is the one intended for home use. Enter the password. Restart the router.

The next time you (or anyone else) tries to access the router, you will be asked for the key. Your computer will save the key for the next time you access the network, and things should go smoothly from there. You are now moderately secure.

4. Turn down the juice.

Your router is automatically configured for the maximum transmission range. This is great if you live in an 1800sq. foot house on an acre of land. If you live in an apartment or townhome, however, most of your neighbors will get strong signal as well. To prevent this, log into your router. Go to the "settings", or "system" tab, and turn down the signal (or transmission) strength to 50 or 75%. This should give you more than enough signal to get access anywhere in your apartment, and keep the guy down the hall from siphoning your bandwidth

5.Enable MAC based filtering.

By combining this step 3, you can create a highly secure home network. This step is for those who don't mind reading the manual, and playing around with the settings a little.

Every wireless card, network card, and modem has what is known as a MAC address. No device has the same MAC address. This is quite possibly the biggest step you can take towards making your network secure.

This is a pretty technical step, so I will refer you to your user's manual for specifics. I will tell you in broad terms what you will have to do.

Make sure that all the computers that you want on your network are on, and connected to your router.

Log in to the router.

Under the "Security" tab, you find a section that will usually be called "Network Filters" or just "Filters".

Select "Filter by MAC Address".

One by one, add the MAC addresses of your wireless(and wired) devices to the table. Most routers will allow you to add up to 20 addresses.

If you can't find your MAC address, click here for a tutorial.

Then select "Allow Access for these PC's".

Save your settings, and let the router reboot.

Your PC's will be able to access the internet as usual, everyone else will be shut out.

This should eliminate casual and intermediate users of the internet from even being allowed access to router login.

If you make a mistake, and lock yourself out, just do a hard reset of your router, and it will go back to the factory defaults.

These are generic instructions, but they hold true for most consumer level routers currently on the market. For more in-depth instruction, always consult the user's manual that came with your router.

Hopefully, this will ease some of your bandwidth woes, and allow you to get the best out of the internet access you are paying for. So kick those freeloaders to the curb, and then make sure they can't get signal.

I'm gonna go download that Miley Cyrus bootleg.

Kurt Hartman has a degree in Network Administration, and many neighbors who would like some of his sweet...sweet wireless access. He's been involved with "The Internets" since before Al Gore invented them.

Currently, he designs modest, yet functional websites.

Recently, he helped with an update of a site that sells otr tires.

Almost forgot...he likes cake.

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Why Test Broadband Speeds?

Nowadays there is a proliferation of broadband speed tests on the internet. These have arisen in response to the growing difference between the speeds advertised by Internet Service Providers (ISP's) and the speeds actually received by consumers. More and more customers are finding that their speeds are far lower than what they are paying for and research by Moneysupermarket.com in 2007 showed that 44% of 43,000 customers were receiving only a pitiful HALF of the advertised speeds for their internet connections. This massive difference between advertised and received speeds has finally caught the attention of communication regulator OFCOM.

OFCOM has warned ISP's that they must be more transparent about the actual speeds consumers are receiving and there are calls from consumer panels to make ISP's contact customers within a fortnight of joining to inform them of their exact actual top speeds. OFCOM has also introduced, since Valentine's Day this year, important regulatory changes that give consumers freedom to switch ISP's if they are not happy with the service and speeds.

In the past ISP's could bully consumers into staying with them by charging them for changing providers and by creating delays that left consumers without a broadband connection for weeks, a situation that forces a lot of people to reluctantly remain with a provider they were unhappy with. Under OFCOM's new regulations, ISP's can no longer charge for switching to new providers. They must also ensure that the Migration Authorisation Code (MAC), the code which is given to customers to give to their new providers, is passed on within five days of the request. In the past ISP's would wait weeks before giving these codes to customers, in order to deter them from changing. Now under the new regulations consumers are protected from this practice.

These changes are part of what will be a continuing development of adequate regulatory standards that are needed for the booming broadband industry. As it becomes more integral to daily life, and bandwidth becomes more valuable, we will need to ensure that consumer rights are protected.

With these changes in mind, now is a really good time to do a test of your broadband speeds to ensure that you are getting what you are paying for, and that you CAN get what you are paying for. With many of the previous obstacles to changing providers removed, consumer freedom is far greater and worth taking advantage of to ensure you the best deal.

Broadband Wise Is The Premier Resource for Broadband Comparisons. With in depth reviews of Sky Broadband in your area.

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