How to hack Wi-Fi networks ( Educational )

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Published 2021-08-12
This video will teach how to pentest / " hack " wifi networks that can be found anywhere.
This video is for educational purposes only and is meant to help you understand how networks are commonly hacked to be able to protect yourself, family and friends against it.

- Kali linux: www.kali.org/
I recommend installing kali linux in a virtual machine, if you do not know how to do this please look up some videos on how to do it.

Wifi / network hacking is not by itself illegal, it is beneficial to gain understanding on how attackers might look to attack your network to be able to prevent it before it happens, especially considering how 99%+ of networks are hackable with this method, so you can most certainly make improvement on your own network at home.

This video took a lot of effort to plan out, record and edit for the content to be in an easy, understandable format even for those that are not very familiar with hacking in general, if you would like to support me you can do so through ko-fi:
ko-fi.com/kianbrosewastaken

Here are the timestamps:
0:00 Introduction
0:22 How it works
0:48 How to do it
5:03 How to protect yourself against this

All Comments (21)
  • @KianBrose
    I just want to make sure that you guys understand that this is only meant to show you how an attacker would perform this attack as knowing how it works is the best way to understand how to prevent it. Do not, under any circumstance, deauth random people or do this to networks that are not yours. As an additional security step, disable auto reconnect on all your wifi devices which protects against a bunch of stuff like this. As for whether it's "patched", this has been fixed in modern versions of wifi protocols like WPA3 and WPA2 with protected frames, but since most ISPs only send out the cheapest 5$ chinese routers when buying an internet connection pretty much everything is vulnerable.
  • @Travis-hb2bl
    Anything is possible as long as you say "for educational purposes"
  • @OP-kk3ke
    “How to ethically find the answers to an online exam” next video 👌🏼
  • @decentraIize
    Thanks for this "educational purposes" definitely didn't hack the upstairs neighbor wifi
  • @JourneyReader
    Bro really pulled out "only for educational purposes" card 💀
  • Thank you, instead of saying how to do it, you actually explained how those commands work. Waiting for the next amazing video!
  • Man! Clear. Concise. To-the-point. Explained. No-Guessing involved. Loved it!
  • @RomaYT999
    In my country 96% of wifi passwords are phone numbers of the owners. So be kind and friendly, meet your neighbors and get their numbers.
  • @ilsigniore2260
    one of the most underrated channels on youtube. im kind of shocked that this channel does not have 100k. one thing id change would be if you could upload more frequently and more python content :D
  • @arianwen27
    5:04 actually there is a protection against a deauthentication attack. Enable protected management frames aka IEEE 802.11w. This prevents an attacker sending deauthentication packets and them actually doing anything. The vulnerability is normal packets are encrypted with wpa2/3 but the control frames are not. PMF enables encryption on these frames, causing a deauth to not work anymore. Support for this is flaky but if you have a high end router or an enterprise wap and a wifi 6 or above client, it'll work.
  • @paavdaemon3658
    You just explained it in so concise and powerpacked manner
  • came from one of your python tutorials, this is great stuff! super enjoyable and well edited!
  • @RaisinBarXZ550
    I like how this video makes it clear enough for a starter like me to understand but probably too much effort for any real problem makers.
  • @pointblank2890
    I have watched a LOT of tech tutorials on Youtube, but your concise, professional, and mild mannered approach really made everything so easy to follow--even if the video is just 5+ minutes long Very well done, and I'm definitely checking out your other videos as well!
  • @this_amy
    Ok so, i never trusted my YouTube's algorithm, I thought this was going to be just another funny video. But hey you taught really well. Thanks
  • @SynnekoNya
    Finally a properly visualized example of how to use em, if you even remotely understand a little of it all and are decently experienced with handing deeper stuff about pcs even better, and if you also know linux, your practically set to start going at it, gotta be glad we have "educational" videos up still xD
  • @waffleseatdogs
    The first video I watched of yours was your first and I was amazed. 18.3k c'mon at least 2.6 M. I had been searching for such a thing for literal months, kind of pissed I didn't see your first video ten months ago. I hope to see you post more in the future. Edit: also somehow your videos have gotten better (because now you can align boxes)
  • @MistrBiggles
    That was the most convoluted way of saying “pick a strong password”
  • @partoz0
    This is the first time I see your channel, I like how short is this video and very helpful, I hope you make all your videos as short as 5 minutes and btw I used to hack networks back in the days with the same way but it was definitely not for education purposes LOL
  • @MichaelBTryn
    I love it how he says to make a long random password to keep yourself secure, but not to switch from WPA PSK.