My friend doesn't know anything about casting so he would not have created that connection. He and his housemate are not friends and don't share time into each other's rooms.If at some stage in the past, a cast connection has been created between the phone and a smart TV, then that connection is not forgotten.
No.is there something sinister here?
Yes, that's what I meant as I had seen the reference to many tabs open so assumed they were watching on a browser.EDIT: Could this have happened from the YouTube app on the TV itself?
Especially given the suspected hacker wasn't in the house at the time. Someone going to the bother of packet inspection is likely to be a little more carefulIt's not very likely that he's "hacking into a phone".
Good luck with that!On the other hand, I can think of two very easy ways for him to see what other roomates are doing on the house wifi.
1. If he has access to the router he could make changes (for example to the dns servers used) and monitor traffic that way. A bit like how parental control software works.
2. He could use packet sniffing software e.g. Wireshark to record network traffic and analyse it later. There are a plethora of tools available for free that can do this e.g. Netwitness Investigator.
My friend is not IT savvy at all
It's all https nowadays. The most he could tell would be that the traffic was being sent to youtube.com he wouldn't be able to see which video was being requested.He could use packet sniffing software e.g. Wireshark to record network traffic and analyse it later. There are a plethora of tools available for free that can do this e.g. Netwitness Investigator.
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