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UTUSN

(72,402 posts)
Mon Aug 29, 2016, 11:01 AM Aug 2016

Do flickering lights on modem/router mean somebody's stealing? How to find out?

I've had the router 5-8 years, am so low tech I had to get a friend to install it. I am pretty sure my set-up is locked. Over the years I've talked to NetGear tech support a couple or three times and the router seems to be fine. I was even told by them that I didn't need to buy a replacement even though it is older than the average use span.

Anyway, lately I've had sessions when my connection, usually at night, has slowed or even stopped. There is still a "connected" status but just stops. I've only used Firefox for about a year, and frankly despite seeing many users here rave over it, it has been more buggy for me than years past of using IE. I've tended to blame Firefox for the connection problems.

But is somebody else pirating into my router/modem?

9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Do flickering lights on modem/router mean somebody's stealing? How to find out? (Original Post) UTUSN Aug 2016 OP
Very hard to say given your knowledge of the router Egnever Aug 2016 #1
There is no pw logon when powering on. When I've talked to tech support & they are UTUSN Aug 2016 #2
But, if someone new stops by and you want to let them on your Wifi Sentath Aug 2016 #4
I would guees yes but the visitors i get dont do UTUSN Aug 2016 #5
Firefox tends to have frequent updates ucrdem Aug 2016 #3
Hacking router passwords is fairly easy Go Vols Aug 2016 #6
That article includes my questions, I'll need to digest it. My internet provider said UTUSN Aug 2016 #8
DHCP connections and System Logs ChromeFoundry Aug 2016 #7
Good Advice TheFa11en Sep 2016 #9

UTUSN

(72,402 posts)
2. There is no pw logon when powering on. When I've talked to tech support & they are
Mon Aug 29, 2016, 12:50 PM
Aug 2016

doing something, there is a pw for Admin? functions, which I have written down & never use for daily use.

Sentath

(2,243 posts)
4. But, if someone new stops by and you want to let them on your Wifi
Mon Aug 29, 2016, 04:23 PM
Aug 2016

Do you need to give them a passphrase or password to connect?

ucrdem

(15,703 posts)
3. Firefox tends to have frequent updates
Mon Aug 29, 2016, 12:51 PM
Aug 2016

which is one reason I stopped using it, not because it hogged memory, though it did that too, but because every time I opened it it was either downloading, installing, or asking me to clean up after update 48.053, meaning I needed to screw around with the extensions it kept breaking.

Anyway I've had a lot of luck with Opera, which has its own ad-blocker that works as well as any extension I've tried and ten times better than IE respecting ads. It's very simple and apparently based on Chrome which I've also tried but like less:

http://www.opera.com/computer

Go Vols

(5,902 posts)
6. Hacking router passwords is fairly easy
Mon Aug 29, 2016, 05:56 PM
Aug 2016

This tool will let you see whats/whos on your network: http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/wireless_network_watcher.html

If you stream alot of media,your router will get laggy over time,I reboot every few days and do a save config, factory reset monthly+ and put the config file back in.It definitely helps.

Good article here(with links) to stay fast :http://lifehacker.com/5931743/top-10-ways-to-boost-your-home-wi-fi/all

Its not Firefox causing it.

UTUSN

(72,402 posts)
8. That article includes my questions, I'll need to digest it. My internet provider said
Tue Aug 30, 2016, 10:36 AM
Aug 2016

that "errors" *DO* show up for last evening when I couldn't get a connection to send and e-mail, that it isn't a matter of somebody using my connection so much as possibly MALWARE.

DUers have previously suggested I use MalwareBytes, which I did on a free trial, and this tech this morning said I should try it again this time. My anti-virus/Trend Micro is always doing scans and showing nothing.

So, am going to try the malwarebytes for now.

ChromeFoundry

(3,270 posts)
7. DHCP connections and System Logs
Tue Aug 30, 2016, 07:14 AM
Aug 2016

...in your Router's admin screens should give you an idea as to who has/is connecting. You can assign "reservations" for IP addresses based on MAC Address (they look like BC:22:F4:2C 4:FE), then when someone new connects they will get an address assigned outside of your "approved" list of connections. You can even configure the router to only allow MAC Addresses that are on your approved list and deny others that are not on the list.

Depending on the router, some manufactures give you statistical screens that show bandwidth usage over the course of the billing cycle. That would be one way to easily see which device is sucking up the usage. I highly doubt that someone connected to your wifi could disrupt your connectivity.

TheFa11en

(11 posts)
9. Good Advice
Fri Sep 9, 2016, 01:02 AM
Sep 2016

I second this advice. Check the Mac addresses for all your devices and only allow those to connect to your router. It might take a few minutes to setup initially, but then it should work fine until you need get some new devices to add.

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