The Quiet Work of a Morning Wardrive
A narrative field story about a sunrise survey, what passive scanning actually reveals, and why restraint matters more than range.
Wireless Research Journal
Professional, readable guidance on wardriving: how wireless surveys work, what they reveal, where the legal line sits, and how to turn passive observation into useful security insight.
Passive collection, defensible analysis, and clean explanations of how wireless infrastructure appears from the street.
Foundations, tools, Wi-Fi security, field stories, and the practical tradeoffs behind good survey work.
No hype, no intrusion, no mystique. Just careful observation and usable security context.
Latest Articles
A narrative field story about a sunrise survey, what passive scanning actually reveals, and why restraint matters more than range.
A street-level story about how network density, channel reuse, and default setups show up during a careful, legal survey.
A reflective piece on why wireless maps are useful, where they fail, and how ethical researchers avoid overclaiming what the data means.
A concise introduction to wardriving, the data collected during passive surveys, and the legitimate reasons people map wireless networks.
From NetStumbler and warchalking to Kismet, WiGLE, and WPA3, this page traces how wardriving matured into a security research practice.
The legal boundary between detection and access, plus the practical code of conduct that keeps wardriving ethical and defensible.