Is my wifi being temporarily stolen?
Hello. I have a general question. My friend's son comes over with his laptop. Since he's been here since yesterday, everyone else was having trouble with the wifi and not being able to connect. As soon as he left today, it starts working perfectly. This kid is usually in his room at home on his computer day and night. I know he's been doing coding and hes also been getting familiar with hacking at home. Not sure how good at it he is or not. Hes 15. Also, hes slightly autistic and very smart.
I'm not home at the moment so I dont know the exact model of my router, but it's a Netgear Nighthawk. I didnt have him connect as "guest", but rather, I gave him the password to connect regularly.
Do you think he was doing something to it that only his connection was working? How do I know and if so, how do I keep him from messing with it next time? It was very aggravating for the last couple of days. The firestick was even acting up while his connection was fine. Thank you.
- Copy Link
- Subscribe
- Bookmark
- Report Inappropriate Content
just a guess, but I suspect he has signed on to your router and changed the QoS settings.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
1) Assuming that was the case, and now everything is working perfectly, do I need to change anything back?
2) How do I avoid this happening in the future besides the obvious of not letting him use it. Would creating a guest account protect this?
3) Can you explain the Qos settings, like what it does?
Thanks.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Go to the QoS (Quality of Service) settings and ensure he has not set his device to be the top priority device which it would do each time he signs on to the router. Setting a device to the top priority would take resources from the other devices and if you have limited amount of service, the impact would be greater. QoS is used by gamers so when they are playing their games, the games run more smoothly by taking more of the available network resources. Others uses it to balance the network resources and to give priority to specific devices such as by people working from home for the work PC. Others may lower the priority to things like printers and home automation devices.
If he had changed the QoS, you need change it, then change the router's User ID and Password to something strong so he can not sign back on to the router.
If anyone has had unauthorized access to my router, I would reset it to factory and reenter my settings changing the WIFI SSIDs / passwords and the router's User ID / Password. Otherwise, I would wonder what else might have been changed such as opening ports.
I would not want anyone on my network (guest or otherwise) that has breached my security. The guest network would not provide any more protection on most routers.
Depending on the router options, you may be able to blacklist his device (you will need his MAC address) or better, white list only the devices you want to attach. White list takes more time and effort as you need to enter the MAC of all your devices. Not all routers support it.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
There are two tabs. One says "basic" and the other says "advanced". The Qos tab only shows under the "basic" tab. And after I click it, it shows this: (photo below). Its just a black check box. What do I do?
In general, which title setting am I looking for, for priority settings?
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
QoS is off which you should have unless you need it. So leave it off. If you turn it on, you will see the options for QoS.
He may be turning it on when he us there.
I would at least change the router User ID and password.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Ok cool. Yes I changed the password to log into the router, but not the username. So basically when he is here, the Qos settings would be on if he were messing with priority settings?
This is off subject, but my ISP likes to somehow attach a wifi hotspot to your personal setup. I dont like how they do this and I'm wondering if there is a way to disable this so that it doesn't slow my connection down in the case of a random person picking up the hotspot signal. Any idea how to stop it? Thanks.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
He would need to sign on to the router to change the QoS settings. If you have the issue, sign on to the router and see if it changed.
Turning off that extra WIFI hotspot may differ based on the ISP. I do not know how to do it. Should be able to Google it or go to the ISP's forum.
- Copy Link
- Report Inappropriate Content
Information
Helpful: 0
Views: 558
Replies: 7
Voters 0
No one has voted for it yet.