
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
After last week’s post and podcast about the dangers of sharing your wifi signal with your neighbor, I had several people contact me about how to keep a computer safe “the other way around”. Meaning, if you are using your neighbor’s wifi signal (with permission of course), what type of precautions should you be taking in order to protect and secure your own computer?
In general, the best plan is to use your computer the same way you would if you were on a public wifi connection and wanted to stay safe and secure.
So that naturally brings up the next question – how do you keep your computer safe on a public wifi connection?
1. Don’t have your computer connect to a public wifi automatically
2. Use 2-factor authentication for sites that offer it
3. Turn off sharing
4. Make sure you know the actual network name
5. Consider using a VPN
There are lots of VPNs available for you to use. Some are free, some you pay for, depending on the features. If you want, use the comments section below to let me know which one you like best and why.
And in addition to those 5 practices, you should also do the things that are considered common sense:
Do you use your neighbor’s wifi? Do you use public wifi? What precautions do you take?
4.8
9696 ratings
After last week’s post and podcast about the dangers of sharing your wifi signal with your neighbor, I had several people contact me about how to keep a computer safe “the other way around”. Meaning, if you are using your neighbor’s wifi signal (with permission of course), what type of precautions should you be taking in order to protect and secure your own computer?
In general, the best plan is to use your computer the same way you would if you were on a public wifi connection and wanted to stay safe and secure.
So that naturally brings up the next question – how do you keep your computer safe on a public wifi connection?
1. Don’t have your computer connect to a public wifi automatically
2. Use 2-factor authentication for sites that offer it
3. Turn off sharing
4. Make sure you know the actual network name
5. Consider using a VPN
There are lots of VPNs available for you to use. Some are free, some you pay for, depending on the features. If you want, use the comments section below to let me know which one you like best and why.
And in addition to those 5 practices, you should also do the things that are considered common sense:
Do you use your neighbor’s wifi? Do you use public wifi? What precautions do you take?