New technologies and social media have given people new ways to communicate… in every way.
Nowadays it is easier than ever to meet people and, therefore, also flirt. Something that many users use their time on the Internet to do, regardless of whether or not they are committed beforehand.
Despite the known risks that online relationships can have, their relative simplicity has triggered infidelities, and also the way they are discovered.
On this occasion it has been a tiktoker who, without even trying, has been able to discover how to “catch” her partner. He has done it neither more nor less than by messing with his WiFi.
The trick to know if your partner is unfaithful
Currently, there are many ways to flirt with someone online: through WhatsApp, social networks, applications specifically designed for flirting, etc. In many cases, it is even difficult to define when someone’s attitude can really be considered infidelity. And it is not easy to find this type of behavior either.
The easiest thing, of course, is to take a look at your partner’s phone to find out what he or she has been doing with it. But it is not always possible to do so, especially if the other person blocks it, and it is also a double-edged sword, which can involve a demonstration of distrust (in the event that your suspicions are unfounded) or an invasion of the privacy.
Even soWhat would happen if you could see where your partner has been just by looking at the Wi-Fi? This is precisely what user Abby Paige has shared through TikTok. Also, without intending to. Apparently, he was checking that no one was using his network when he discovered the possibility of viewing online activity.
By entering your company’s services, Xfinity WiFi, He realized that through a feature called Manage People, he could see which users were logged in, and a detailed record of their browsing data. So, Without even thinking about it, your WiFi connection revealed when and where your partner was browsing. In this case, Instagram.
A “snitch” WiFi to unmask an unfaithful couple
It can be assumed that, in this specific case, Abby did not welcome her partner entering this social network, which for her is used, according to her own term, to “flirt.” However, it does not seem that WiFi would allow us to go further and provide details as specific as those of a browser’s history. But enough to arouse her suspicions.
Beyond the anecdotal and accidental nature of the case, as she herself said on her TikTok profile, this type of behavior also generates controversy. The first of them, To what extent is it advisable to inquire into another person’s supposed privacy? And even more than that, is it reasonable to spread a couple’s experiences on social networks?
Not to mention, of course, that perhaps the best way to understand or prevent infidelity, if flirting over the Internet is understood, is through an open and clear conversation. Because at the end of the day, no matter how much a Wi-Fi or a history is reported, if someone wants to be unfaithful, they will be unfaithful in one way or another. It is something that has always existed and will exist.