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Ok, here's my question.

1) In the administration login for a wireless router, is there a section which shows the web addresses for sites visited by computers on that network??

2) If yes, how long is that log kept? Is it ever deleted after a certain timelength (similar to web browsers' History file)?

3) How are these websites logged (assuming they ARE, of course)- as a www.xxx.com, or as an I.P. address with the numbers??

4) If the wireless router is set up to encrypt, will those addresses continue to be identified on the administrator's login?

Thank you so much if you can help me!!! I need to know if I need to get my own internet access or if I can safely piggyback on the 'rent's connection!

2006-12-11 18:07:57 · 5 answers · asked by clarsagoth 1 in Computers & Internet Security

5 answers

Yes, connections are logged, and yes they can see exactly what sites you are visiting. The Logs normally only holds the last 50 sites (depending entirely upon router brand)
Most routers have a feature where they will email the logs to the email address of the admins choosing as they fill up, how long he/she saves them /reviews them is entirely up to the person who manages the router ( I review mine on a daily basis, and keep them indefiantly)

If you want to hide the sites you are visiting from the person who manages the router, you will need to use a proxy, either web-based or locally on your machine. I would recommend Tor, as this is a socks proxy that runs locally on your computer, and they will not see anything at all in the routers logs (such as a web-based proxy would generate, ie www.anonymizer.org, etc), as most routers only log http requests.

http://tor.eff.org/docs/tor-doc-win32.html.en

2006-12-11 18:25:30 · answer #1 · answered by gnobody 3 · 0 0

1. Some routers have traffic logging features which you can enable if you want. My Linksys WRT54G has this, for example, but on this particular model, it's not enabled by default, and I've never bothered to turn it on.

2. and 3. will vary with different routers, and should probably be configurable.

4. Encryption only scrambles the connection between the computer and the router. It doesn't keep the router from knowing what IP addresses were visited -- after all, the router has to know in order to make the connection.

Why not ask your parents if they have logging turned on?

2006-12-11 18:25:55 · answer #2 · answered by MarnenLK 6 · 0 0

Yes, you'll do what you describe. You will ought to purchase 2 ethernet cables lengthy sufficient to attach your computers to the wi-fi router that you just bought. The connection is from an ethernet card for your computers (appear for the commencing that appears like a mobilephone jack, however fairly higher) to a type of 4 jacks at the again of your new router. Your modem will attach (cable) to the router, no longer a laptop. Your pc will ought to be in a position to log onto the wi-fi router--and also you must perform a little matters to shield it, specially if you're in a dorm, else all of your associates will use it, too. Get a few aid environment it up--however you must identify the community anything as opposed to the default identify supplier by means of the enterprise, flip off the printed of the community (or your approach) identify, use MAC filtering, and major--use WPA encryption, with a powerful key (password), anything no longer readily guessed or damaged.

2016-09-03 07:54:59 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Unless they started making routers I don't know about, there is no information stored on your router beyond the basics like domain name, encryption, etc.

To log data like surfing logs would take memory that I am not aware that routers have. All of your surfing data, cookies, etc is stored on the computer you are surfing with.

2006-12-11 18:16:45 · answer #4 · answered by No Bushrons 4 · 0 2

If it isn't encrypted you can safely piggyback on any wireless connection.

2006-12-11 18:10:51 · answer #5 · answered by Allie K 2 · 0 2

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