The Hidden Dangers of Compromised Wi-Fi Routers

 

Cybercriminals who attack routers are swift and precise, spending countless hours studying network vulnerabilities to compromise sensitive data and then taking advantage of those vulnerabilities to compromise the router. The term “router hacking” refers to taking control of a user’s router without their consent by a cybercriminals.
The Wi-Fi hacker, like other types of hackers, relies on security measures that a user may have implemented to protect themselves against the hack – often the administrator password for their router or an unpatched vulnerability in their system. The hacker has a variety of tricks that he can use if he wants to hack into a router successfully. 
There is a risk that a hacker will be able to gain access to a router in minutes if the user has not set a strong password for their router. The hacker can take control of users’ router after they have gained access, and even change the settings or install malicious software on users’ router after they have gained control. These are all signature signs that users have been hit by a black-hat hacker, as opposed to their more altruistic white-hat cousins. 
Approximately one in 16 internet-connected home Wi-Fi routers can be remotely accessed by attackers using the manufacturer’s default admin password.

Getting continually kicked off users’ home networks can be super annoying, but that’s

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