Quit watching so much Scifi/spy media...๐คฆโโ๏ธ
Home Networking
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Pop culture is one of the reasons people think hackers can hack into anything when in reality most effective methods are social engineering and phishing.
Yes, when talking to you they will have another tab open to Hacker Typer where they will be furiously hacking your mainframe. /s
u/ElevenNotes has given you a suitably proper answer, I'm just here for the fun.
Can they? Theoretically is possible. In all likelihood however it's not feasible.
The biggest concern you should have if you aren't port forwarding is a router exploit. If your router is past end of life then the manufacturer may not be providing any more security updates for it and that could leave it vulnerable.
TP-Link a few years ago refused to patch some older routers that had an exploit because they were 10 years old. So, it happens.
Google your router name/model number and exploits to see if anything exists for it. If not then you're fine.
Have you restarted your phone yet?
Through known chat services, other users should not be able to obtain that information.
However, without knowing the other site it maybe trickier. The only reason why I say this is that if it's a unknown site for all I know the person could be an admin/owner of the site, which probably can find those details in the log. Now with that being said, taking that IP address and doing something on your connection and being successful is slim if you don't have your modem broadcasting it's config page to the public. By default all equipment is never set to this.
"Connected to device, cannot provide internet" almost sounds like either A. your internet is down. B. You provided the wrong passphrase to your equipment or C. The equipment is having an issue.
I would reboot all your network devices and try again. I don't see you mention any other device that connects, so I am going under the assumption you are wifi only on it. After rebooting if you have the issue, I would suggest that you contact your internet provider, since they could be having issues that maybe causing your problems.
If other devices are connecting, but not that one, I would suggest to reboot the affected device then.
No. If you don't run strange software that someone give you or open link and download stuff, no.
Your is just a WiFi problem.