Keep your Wi-Fi signal in your own house by lowering its signal strength

Tue Mar 4, 2008 9:33PM EST

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Reader Mike Waters writes: I am concerned about Wi-Fi security. One of the most basic ways to secure a wireless signal seems like it would be to reduce the strength in "uncontrolled" areas so no signal can be received. I would like to be able to REDUCE the range of my home Wi-Fi network so it just covers my house! As it is I can receive signals almost 2 blocks away! Is there any safe, reliable way to do this? Remove tha antenna from the hub, wear a tinfoil hat?

Sure enough, there is, but not on every router. Hop into your router management system (either through a program you installed when you set up your router initially or by typing the IP address of the router into your web browser), and poke around. Every router is different, but you'll likely find the option to reduce radio transmission power under advanced settings or somewhere else in the wireless configuration section. On Linksys routers, for example, look for "Output Power" under the Advanced Wireless tab. Remember, though, that not all routers include this feature (not even all routers from the same vendor).

Like Mike suggests, lowering the total power output of your router can do a good job at keeping the signal from spreading too far outside your house and down the street. However, this method comes with some caveats. The big one: By lowering signal strength you may inadvertently lower the signal too much so that you don't cover your entire house. Wireless signal is finicky, and the just-fine signal strength on one floor may be barely acceptable a single story up. You may very well drop your connection altogether in the far corners of your home, so experiment before you etch this setting in stone.

The other caveat is that even if your signal doesn't drop out, it will likely slow down throughout your house, even when you are relatively close to the router. As signal strength decreases, the signal-to-noise ratio falls as well, which means you'll lose more data and suffer through more re-transmissions as interference gets worse, lowering the overall speed of the connection.  (Neighbor networks may overpower yours, even.) This may not be a big deal, in fact you may not even notice it, or it may have such an impact that it makes your network unusable. Again, you'll have to experiment to find a setting that keeps the network relatively confined to your house while still giving you enough bandwidth to work comfortably in.

Regardless of whether you throttle your wireless radio's power output, don't rely on this as your sole means of Wi-Fi security. Use wireless encryption, set a strong administrator password, and change default settings as described here

Comments on Keep your Wi-Fi signal in your own house by lowering its signal strength

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  • 26 Posted by torque589 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    I'm using a linksys routers and what i hve done is the MAC address filtering in which if some other pc wants to connect to my wireless router and their MAC address is not defined immediately it will turn down the request,this is much full proof than other security.

  • 27 Posted by raven_84_raven on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:29PM EDT Report Abuse

    Wireless signal strength should be the very very last step to improve the security of a connection, and only for the paranoid. Before you ever decide to accept a decrease in wireless network performance by weakening the signal in the name of security, you should encrypt the signal with the strongest encryption available on your router, limit users by MAC address, turn off SSID broadcast, disable remote administration, and use a strong administrator password. With all of those things in place, nobody will even be attempting to use your connection unless they are targeting you personally and want to frame you by committing cybercrimes through your connection. And I said attempt, not be successful. It is very unlikely (I would never say it is impossible to hack anything) that anybody will be using your connection if you take these security measures. I also doubt it would be any less likely anybody will be successful if you weaken the signal strength. No matter how much you weaken the signal, as long as it is still at a usable strength for you to use it in your house, people outside of your house are able to get that signal by using a simple directional antenna. If you are assuming that people aren't likely to go to such great lengths to get that signal, you are right. That is why all you need to do is the other measures to improve security that I listed above. Weakening the signal is a very marginal security improvement at best. As for saving energy, it is also a very marginal improvement. Most wireless routers with modems use less than 10 watts. Unless you have abolished incandescent bulbs, installed a heat pump in your house, unplugged all chargers with transformers built in when not in use, and done dozens of other things to improve your "greenness," you are insulting the environment with such a minor improvement while ignoring all your other environmental shortcomings. Monetarily, the savings would be measured in coinage, not paper.

  • 28 Posted by strawberryfields360 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    Keep the net free, Wi-Fi for all. You buy it we will leach and you can just keep your mouth shut and pay the bill.

  • 29 Posted by sathit2001 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    Yeah sometimes people get all the information from your computer by using wi-fi and trying toplay around with u

  • 30 Posted by romolake on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    ^_^ Media really knows how to wash brains and command consumers to get their "own service" to prevent loss of "MONEY" to companies, sounds like another "CD burner included in PC, but don't burn CD's cuz it is "ILLEGAL" ^_^

  • 31 Posted by ardo316 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    Just put foil all around your house. http://theworldwrites.blogspot.com/

  • 33 Posted by hd1200sportster_1989 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    What year is this Christopher Null from? Please do some homework prior to making a fool out of your self. Key word is encryption otherwise known as security to keep outsiders from hopping onto your network. Also wireless routers have had some form of firewall for many years so people can not try to get into ports of your LAN from the Internet. Other security features is to set a DHCP range and use static IPs for your machines or MAC addresses to select IPs to your devices. Then you can block services for all non-local IP ranges for all ports (ports 1 ~ 65534). Please write about subjects that you know something about like electric toothbrushes.

  • 34 Posted by k.withlub on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:45PM EDT Report Abuse

    Isn't their a way to secure your wi-fi? My home is secure. Their should be an option to make it secure so that other devices have to put in a WEP key in order to use that connection. Even if people COULD steal my connection while it's secure, why would I care? As long as it doesn't slow down my internet, I'll be fine. If I really didn't want someone to use my wi-fi, I could probably just block them since it is MY router.

  • 35 Posted by drmatthewcrandall9 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    Folks, many of you missed the point. Let's start with basics: Wi-Fi, even encrypted, can be hacked if someone wants you bad enough. The supposedly only secure method requires a cat-5 cable...and even that is questionable unless you run your own ISP and server. Not all of us can or do. What this article is explaining, if you took the time to really read it, is to limit the signal from your wireless router. Period. For some people, this is really an issue, especially in the larger cities and suburbs. WEP and WPA will simply encrypt. Not everyone who pays for their internet want to share it with their neighbors. I certainly don't. I conduct business over the web, and need all the signal I can get. Raven has the right idea.

  • 36 Posted by simplywalata on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    One of the dumbest of all dumb articles, what is the essence of the SSID key on a WEP?duh?.. I'm starting to think someone wrote this... DUMB...Remove what antenna???????

  • 37 Posted by simplywalata on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    One of the dumbest of all dumb articles, what is the essence of the SSID key on a WEP?duh?.. I'm starting to think someone wrote this... DUMB...Remove what antenna???????

  • 38 Posted by bruce1denton on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:14PM EDT Report Abuse

    Ok folks you all missed the boat Its Called War driving this term mean to look for a wifi siginal which is unprotected or easy to hack.yes wep is secirty but only as secure as the lock on your home door a cheap crow bar and so much for that lock. My point here is wifi securty is only going to stop honest computer users. Lets face some fact here,as high speed internet price get higher more people will be looking to get it for free. Yes it is comming to the point were wifi will be every where but will wifi security keep it confined to each network no way new secirty is just a new challange for the next hacker i can crack any wep password in less than five minutes I work for Visa card services network secerity. No wifi siginal is secure.Sorry to disapoint you people password are only a false sence of security. They make software to break those and it can be download for free try crackerjack.So now whats safe nothing is safe face it.We all have spyware and malware from the internet that expolits our systems so what the differance with wifi? Nothing dont ya just love wifi

  • 39 Posted by nsakhu on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    This is ridiculous. there are greater threats than through our wifi networks. if our laptop is secure, which it should be anyway as we use them in restaurents, airports etc, sharing wifi would not harm us. And if laptop ain't secure we can anyway get hacked at these places. so my take is share your wifi internet and secure your systems.

  • 40 Posted by upscale2469 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    Don't kid yourself people, it is almost impossible to have a secure wifi network. There is equipment available to almost anyone that can zero in on your signal and amplify it from quite a distance away. Hackers have become extremely sophisticated, and can get your sensitive information and data off of any kind of wireless device. If you are really serious about security, don't use any wireless network or device, period!

  • 41 Posted by jackgsylvester on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:26PM EDT Report Abuse

    Since few routers have the power capability, it is a waste to even look. Set up security through WPA-2 and enjoy being able to use your system someplace besides right next to it.

  • 42 Posted by shawnmeboy86 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:18PM EDT Report Abuse

    Just encrypt the dang thing with WPA, there's no need to shorten the length of the router's signal.

  • 43 Posted by prax_silverarrow on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:18PM EDT Report Abuse

    Hi all,Here is wat u all can do,I work for an Major ISP in US ( Call centre based in india) This is something that i tell all my customer/clients instead doing all these old fashioned tricks try this .U need to login in to the router and need to go to the Advanced wireless settings tab and then use a SSID and network key encryptor so that if any computer say for eg even your computer tries to connect to the router a SSID/Net key is prompted the answer of which is only wid you thus makin it secure and safe and thereby restricting access to unspecified users...Any comments keep dem comin @ Prax_silverarrow@yahoo.com...

  • 44 Posted by etiennefan on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:56PM EDT Report Abuse

    Agreed stupid article, completely pointless. With a secure wpa 2 connection, you don't have to worry about any of those things, the important part is a long password like https://www.grc.com/passwords.htm pseudo random

  • 45 Posted by jeldobar on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:32PM EDT Report Abuse

    end of story !!!! if a hacker wants your stuff .... they will take it .... just pray they never zone in on you ..... like another person said before making your wifi secure only blocks honest internet users..... So if you hate your neighbors and don't want to pay for their internet use .. then yes secure it .... But you people are the most idiotic people on the planet to think anything can protect you from a hacker.

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