Seven Years of Service
Posts: 59
Threads: 1
RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments 03-07-2018, 11:04 PM
#3
Here's a good tip: If you want to avoid legal trouble, don't do anything illegal.
My advice? Keep your hacking to systems that you either own or have been given permission to test with.
Remember the following saying for things like this
"Don't do the crime, if you can't do the time."
Twelve Years of Service
Posts: 1,596
Threads: 181
RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments 03-08-2018, 12:10 AM
#4
@"Nytelife26" said pretty much everything that needed to be said.
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Twelve Years of Service
Posts: 18,151
Threads: 1,994
RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments 03-08-2018, 02:41 AM
#5
If you're asking a question this broad, that's an indication you probably have no business doing what you're about to. Inform yourself on the laws first. At a minimum be wary of logs, cameras, witnesses. Some libraries require people to check in with their card, too. Not sure what you're doing? Then you probably shouldn't.
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Twelve Years of Service
Posts: 72,626
Threads: 307
RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments 03-08-2018, 08:02 AM
#6
I can tell you from first-hand experience, what you're attempting can have serious consequences.
Judging by your post, It appears you have very little knowledge of what you wish to achieve and how to go about doing It. Best advice and simply stated, don't do It.
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Seven Years of Service
Posts: 255
Threads: 40
RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments 03-08-2018, 12:24 PM
#7
What do you expect from sniffing a library network? Some search requests and a few Facebook logins?
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Six Years of Service
Posts: 25
Threads: 0
RE: [Help] Hacking in public environments 03-19-2018, 11:38 PM
#9
There's really no way to get caught doing something like this if you're on the same LAN as everyone else as long as your computer's name isn't anything that personally identifies you. I'd do it in the bathroom though considering the fact that cameras + network traffic timestamps can get you caught.
With regards to actually capturing data, there's plenty of shit you can find by googling "how to sniff traffic of computers on your network"
(This post was last modified: 03-19-2018, 11:39 PM by x n.)
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