

Thanks in advance for your time and effort. (which is what I just did, with my own laptop that is). I do not want people to be able to connect to my network without a password Please tell me how this was able to happen, and, The computer also stated (hovering over the network icon in the task bar) that the network was Public, it's not supposed to be this way, I changed a setting and now it says it's ''Protected'' instead.

Instead, my question is (sorry if I am repetitive here), why the heck did this computer automatically connect to a password-protected network? I did find some advanced forum threads about ''roaming sensitivity'' but it seems like a risky thing to mess around with the context of my question. Even if it was, I do not trust that just ticking some box on this PC for a wifi connection will prevent other devices in the future from doing the same. I cannot find any useful results on Google - everything points to tutorials to turn off automatic connecting for a wifi network in particular, but that's not precisely my question. Volatility in mortgage products was also examined in the committee meeting, with increasing base rates being blamed for the recent inconsistency in products.I just moved into a new condo, and my main working laptop automatically connected to my router that I let a network/cable company install a few weeks ago. This point was made by Assam who stated that, as so many different lenders have different approaches to mortgage lending, the mortgage charter, which currently covers 85 per cent of the financial market, can provide some certainty for customers on what is available. The committee additionally discussed the mortgage charter, with lenders saying that, while much of what the charter offers is already available, it is still benefical to customers. Skipton Building Society interim CEO, Charlotte Harrison, said: “In terms of the trend of percentage of customers that are in arrears that remains flat year-on-year.” Santander UK mortgage director, Bradley Fordham, added that, while there has been a small uptick in arrears, the rates were still 20 per cent below pre-pandemic levels and 70 per cent below the levels in 2009. This observation was echoed by the other lenders on the panel including Lloyds Banking Group homes director, Andrew Asaam, who said: “Arrears remain very low in a historical context”.
