

But bear in mind that some spy cams have lenses smaller than a Pea size. Check your router? Is the item still listed? If not, you might have cut of its supply and that will narrow the sphere of investigations. If you can get to your breaker box, trip the breaker that supplies pwr to your bathroom. Rules about electrical power in Bathrooms are STRICT, at least here in Europe they are. Jordan, unless the item is battery powered ( could well be ), it will require pwr to it. Anyone, I’d greatly appreciate the help on locating this device. The only way I recognize it is by the MAC address. You will see based on the dates how the person has tried to mask or alter the device on the site. Please see below the screen shots of this device accessing my WiFi. Oh and I was able to get an IP address, because the one time it renamed itself as from unknown to an iPhone it had an IP address associated with it. The weird thing is the MAC address registers as apple. He is good with technology or knows people that are. Also the previous signal strength showed red just like my phone would in the bathroom. This ex friend of mine would spend a lot of time in bathroom and recently before we ended the friendship, I caught him lying about using the bathroom. Previously it showed showed a signal strength of in the red, which is what my own phone has in the bathroom area. I believe an ex friend of mine planted something in my apartment and that it is hidden in my bathroom. The device also renamed itself as an iPhone and now today it doesn't have a name and the connection Type is masked. Only when I log into my router directly does it show. Yet, Fing and my AT&T app don’t show it connected. Just ask Robert Moskowitz who is the Senior Technical Director of ICSA Labs in his white paper Debunking the myth of SSID hiding.Recently I took notice an unknown device has been connected to my AT&T home WiFi network. Hidden SSIDs also makes wireless LANs less user friendly. Nothing is hidden and all youve achieved is cause problems for Wi-Fi roaming when a client jumps from AP to AP. Essentially, youre talking about hiding 1 of 5 SSID broadcast mechanisms. The 4 mechanisms are probe requests, probe responses, association requests, and re-association requests. There are 4 other mechanisms that also broadcast the SSID over the 2.4 or 5 GHz spectrum. You're only hiding SSID beaconing on the Access Point. SSID hiding: There is no such thing as "SSID hiding".

Only person your hiding it from is your users. Hey is that hiddenssid here, so I can connect to you! You do understand know that every client that has ever connected to this network is broadcasting it where they go - looking for it. SSID should always be broadcasted ALWAYS!! Hiding it just makes life difficult for you and your users, it is not a security feature not broadcasting it. Good for you - you use one of the top 6 dumbest ways of securing your network.
