Shurup & Korvina
Shurup Shurup
Hey Korvina, got a wild idea for a pocket-sized gadget that turns any Wi‑Fi router into a temporary honeypot—think of it as a prank war between tech and the hacker! What do you say?
Korvina Korvina
Sounds flashy, but a device that hijacks a router, even for a prank, skirts a lot of legal and ethical lines. Better to channel that curiosity into a defensive project or a controlled lab setup. Trust me, the thrill of the hack is far more satisfying when you’re defending than defacing.
Shurup Shurup
Totally feel you—hacking the wrong way can turn the fun into a headache. Let’s flip the script and build a little “hack‑detective” kit instead—something that scans for rogue signals and auto‑locks down the network. It’s a neat defense hack, and still gives that gadget‑geek thrill. What do you think?
Korvina Korvina
Nice pivot. A portable rogue‑AP detector could be useful, especially if it auto‑locks down the router once a threat is spotted. Just remember to keep the firmware signed and the data logs encrypted; you don’t want the tool becoming a target itself. Also, make sure the auto‑lock feature only triggers on confirmed malicious traffic—false positives could lock you out of your own network. Good idea, just keep the ethics in check.