I downloaded KisMac onto my MacBook Air, inserted my TP-Link WN321G USB card (based on an RT73 chipset), used my desktop PC to log into the configuration page of my 2Wire DSL Modem/router/wireless router, set it to WEP instead of WPA (Default is WEP but I prefer WPA, but I wanted to start with WEP as it's easier), and configured KisMac...
What the hell am I doing, you ask? Well, I'm practicing WEP cracking. Sure, many of you have done it, and there are tons of tuts online about doing it with BackTrack Linux, etc. But I'm doing it on a completely normal computer running a completely normal OS, and managed to do it in an extremely short period of time. No command line anything, no complicated setup, no installing aircrack-ng, kismet, etc. from the linux terminal...
And, after getting bored with waiting for packets, I installed Ookla's speedtest.net app on my android phone, and hit the Restart Test button until I got many many packets captured...
In a short amount of time, I ended up with this. And yes, Apartment9 is the name of my wireless network, and yes, that WEP key is correct (well, if you take out the colons)...
The only reason this took much longer than it was supposed to is because for some reason packet injection doesn't work properly on my computer... if it did, it would have gone a lot faster
The key to a successful intrusion into a WEP-protected wireless connection? Lots of traffic on it
What the hell am I doing, you ask? Well, I'm practicing WEP cracking. Sure, many of you have done it, and there are tons of tuts online about doing it with BackTrack Linux, etc. But I'm doing it on a completely normal computer running a completely normal OS, and managed to do it in an extremely short period of time. No command line anything, no complicated setup, no installing aircrack-ng, kismet, etc. from the linux terminal...
And, after getting bored with waiting for packets, I installed Ookla's speedtest.net app on my android phone, and hit the Restart Test button until I got many many packets captured...
In a short amount of time, I ended up with this. And yes, Apartment9 is the name of my wireless network, and yes, that WEP key is correct (well, if you take out the colons)...
The only reason this took much longer than it was supposed to is because for some reason packet injection doesn't work properly on my computer... if it did, it would have gone a lot faster

The key to a successful intrusion into a WEP-protected wireless connection? Lots of traffic on it

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