In short, warwalking and wardriving is a type of behavior in which a person either walks or drives around the neighborhood and scouts for open or vulnerable wireless networks to access, often with ill intentions of trying to “treasure hunt” and scout for information that can be used to cause harm or inflict data leaks. In some cases, this can be used as part of the enumeration process in which a hacker tries to learn about their victim target as much as possible. Instead of scouting for information about their victims online, they would try to compromise the victim’s wireless network and decipher what they can about their network packets and, in this process, get first-hand information about their victims. Two of the best ways to try to penetrate a wireless network are to first disguise a fake wireless access point as a legitimate one and second, to use a tool known as kismet to try to sniff private networks and see if you can decipher some of the network packets and look for potential weaknesses or penetration points.