SSID means service set identifier, basically it is a name given to a wireless network. It makes it easier to identify and select different networks from a list. From Wikipedia: The SSID can be up to 32 characters long. As the SSID displays to users, it normally consists of human-readable characters. However, the standard does not require this. The SSID is defined as a sequence of 1-32 octets each of which may take any value.
An attacker can spoof the SSID simply by using an SSID of NULL in all messages.
An SSID is the 'name' of a nearby wireless hotspot. If there's no compatible hotspot in range, no 'hack' can magically generate one.
The SSID you use is the one for your own wireless network, you set it when you set up the wireless router. So if your network is named 'MyInternet', that's the name your router is broadcasting. That's the SSID that the PSP needs.
The SSID is the name of your own wireless network, that's the one you should use - if you don't have one, you'll need to get a wireless router.
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an unidentified network is one where the SSID cannot be detected
service set identifier, a 32-character unique identifier attached to theheader of packets sent over a WLAN that acts as a password when a mobiledevice tries to connect to the BSS. The SSID differentiates one WLAN from another, so all access points and all devices attempting to connect to a specific WLAN must use the same SSID. A device will not be permitted to join the BSS unless it can provide the unique SSID. Because an SSID can be sniffed inplain text from a packet it does not supply any security to the network. An SSID is also referred to as a network name because essentially it is a name that identifies a wireless network.
The SSID is the 'name' of your wireless network. So when it scans for wi-fi signals, your connection should show up on the list, that's the one you choose. Of course if you don't actually have a wireless connection then there will not be a usable SSID, those others belong to other people.
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an unidentified network is one where the SSID cannot be detected
The SSID is the identifying 'name' of a wireless network. The PSP can connect to wireless networks, you can set it to scan for one, or if you already know the name, enter it manually.Obviously the SSID will be different for every PSP, but the SSID itself is a property of the wireless network, not the PSP itself, you're just entering it into the PSP so it can recognise and access that network.