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The tiny design makes them ideal for mobile applications such as wardriving.
Why did nobody get all upset when Skyhook went around wardriving the entire nation?
Recreational logging and mapping of other people's access points has become known as wardriving.
But in Riddell's case, the "wardriving" was done from a boat.
Wardriving is a common method of wireless network reconnaissance.
Wardriving involves a computer user driving around searching for insecure wireless networks.
The aim of wardriving is to collect information about wireless access points (not to be confused with piggybacking).
Warbiking is similar to wardriving, but is done from a moving bicycle or motorcycle.
It was the wardriving, of course.
The purpose of wardriving is to locate a wireless network and to collect information about its configuration and associated clients.
Warkitting is a combination of wardriving and rootkitting.
Kismet for Linux is a widely used Wardriving program.
A more recent phenomenon is wardriving, the searching for wireless networks (Wi-Fi) from a moving vehicle.
Wardriving was named after wardialing, since both techniques involve brute-force searches to find computer networks.
Netstumbler has become one of the most popular programs for wardriving and wireless reconnaissance, although it has a disadvantage.
One of their techniques apparently involved "wardriving," or cruising through different areas with a laptop computer and looking for retailers' accessible wireless Internet signals.
This process is referred to as wardriving and is used by hackers throughout the world to identify wireless networks that are not secure.
Wardriving commonly involves someone driving around in a car with a laptop and antenna to find and access, perhaps exploit, a wireless computer.
Wardriving involves driving around in a car with a laptop computer looking for unsecure wireless computer networks of retailers.
Piggybacking is distinct from wardriving, which involves only the logging or mapping of the existence of access points.
The word is formed by analogy to wardriving, the practice of driving around an area in a car to detect open Wi-Fi nodes.
Google says it inadvertently started collecting the data in 2008 while mapping wireless networks, a practice it dubbed "wardriving."
'Warbiking' is essentially the same as wardriving, but it involves searching for wireless networks while on a moving bicycle or motorcycle.
At this point, unlike Wardriving no software or techniques are publicly available to enable Warzapping by casual computer users.
Some places (restaurants, motels, libraries, etc.) were known to reliably offer wireless access and wardriving located other availabilities.