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How was my "5G on-the-go hotspot" network device hacked?
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<blockquote data-quote="Vitali Ortzi" data-source="post: 1115257" data-attributes="member: 57714"><p>If you didn't install a certificate then all ssl traffic is encrypted</p><p>About that device it's either the device you used for the hotspot or a local device if you didn't set the firewall settings to public as setting as public should restrict at least some connections made by local devices</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>You can check the ssl certificate of the site your visiting and see if it was replaced by a malicious actor if not then you're likely safe at least for ssl traffic</p><p></p><p></p><p>Btw you can use a vpn to encrypt your traffic although unnecessary or add a firewall like comodo, zone alarm, Symantec but again unnecessary </p><p>As windows firewall treating the network as public and a secure DNS should be more then enough</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Vitali Ortzi, post: 1115257, member: 57714"] If you didn't install a certificate then all ssl traffic is encrypted About that device it's either the device you used for the hotspot or a local device if you didn't set the firewall settings to public as setting as public should restrict at least some connections made by local devices You can check the ssl certificate of the site your visiting and see if it was replaced by a malicious actor if not then you're likely safe at least for ssl traffic Btw you can use a vpn to encrypt your traffic although unnecessary or add a firewall like comodo, zone alarm, Symantec but again unnecessary As windows firewall treating the network as public and a secure DNS should be more then enough [/QUOTE]
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