On 05/19/11 21:14, Tim wrote: > On Fri, 2011-05-20 at 12:19 +0900, Misha Shnurapet wrote: >> Nope, if you're a plain user like me using an applet to "scan" you'll >> only see what's broadcast. > Nope, depending on your client, you'll see them all. Even Windows did > that. You'd see a list of *all* transmitting access points, and the > ones with the so-called hidden SSID listed as "unnamed." > > It really is bogus advice to hide it. > > 1. Clueless user follows bogus advice, falsely believes it makes > them safer. > 2. Clueless user, then, finds things that they want to connect to > their WLAN, now, won't connect. > 3. Clueless user has to ask for help. > 4. Wastes all our time. > 5. Slightly clueful user, now, starts to broadcast their SSID and > everything works fine. > 6. Or, pigheaded clueless user continues to hide their SSID, and > continues to fight with WLAN and mailing list... > Tim, your points are way too generalized. No one said not broadcasting alone will make you safer. It is advised as part of the larger defense scheme of choosing a strong protocol, a strong encryption scheme, a 63 byte string, preferably random if user can work with it, ...etc ...etc. You keep harping about a point that is just one of several to help individuals be as safe as possible, while keeping things manageable. You proceed on the assumption that everyone who wants to connect to your wlan is a savvy hacker with the right tools. I do not think that that is the case. Furthermore, all the postings of links that show how wpa2-psk/aes is easily broken is nothing but lies. It takes hefty computing power, like a massively parallel machine, and the right code breaking algorithms, which are in the domains of highly educated researchers. Gov has made it illegal to publish such algorithms, at least in the USA. As I challenged another OP: Show us a respectable scientific publication showing that wpa2-psk/AES with a decent passphrase was broken by a modern pc running windows or linux in a short time. And please: spare us the youtube junk. -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines