Troubleshooting & How-Tos 📡 🔍 Obsolete

Forgetting Out-of-Range WiFi Networks on a Samsung Galaxy Phone

Samsung’s Android skin won’t let you tell it to forget a saved WiFi network unless it can see it right now. If it’s present, sure. If it’s out of range, it won’t let you tell it that no, you really don’t want it to automatically connect the next time you’re in range.

This is both annoying (your Galaxy S7 or Note 5 is going to keep looking for those networks all. the. time.) and a security risk (imagine someone sets up a rogue hotspot called “Starbucks WiFi” and you happen to park your car* or sit on a bench within range of it).

Note that the stock Android settings do allow you to fix this, with a Saved Networks section in the WiFi config. Samsung deliberately removed the feature** for some reason.

Apparently it used to be possible to remove saved networks using a third-party app, but new security protections in Marshmallow prevent that. (Ironic, that.)

Workaround (source):

  1. List all saved networks by going to Settings → Data Usage → More → Restrict networks. (This doesn’t let you remove them, just limit background transfers on them.) Take a screenshot if you have to.
  2. Remove the ones you don’t want anymore by tediously renaming your own WiFi hotspot to match each in turn [edit: you also need to match the security type (open vs WPA2)], removing them one by one in the regular WiFi settings, then renaming your hotspot back to its normal SSID.

It’s a pain, but at least it’s possible.

Update May 2017: The Android 7 update finally restores this capability directly in the Settings app, at least on the Galaxy Tab S2. You can now go to

Settings → Connections → Wi-Fi → Advanced → Manage networks

to remove saved networks of just turn off auto-reconnect on a case-by-case basis (so you can keep saved passwords). But for older Android versions, we’re still stuck doing it the long way.

Comments

jelabarre

Samsung loves to break functionality in their custom code. Supposedly in a normal Android setup you can actually disable the Guest User option, yet Samsung decided you weren’t allowed to make that choice. I had been locking out my Tab4 when I set it down, so my daughter wouldn’t pick it up and start surfing when she was supposed to be doing homework or something else (and so I didn’t have to wrestle it back when I wanted to use it). Now she discovered Guest mode, and now she sneaks off to watch YouTube there (since I block it off her laptop for schoolwork). It’s out of warranty, I should try finding a CyanogenMod hack firmware for it.

Of course, the whole WiFi spec is messed up anyway. I don’t know if newer versions of the spec fix it, but at one time I needed the ability to block/blacklist SSIDs, and there was NO way to do that. At my job we had the corporate/internal SSID, and then the guest network. So guess which one my laptop would constantly try to connect to in the server lab? Even when I would explicitly switch to the internal wifi, it would switch to the guest network because it was a stronger signal. It’s a serious security hole, and as usual, ease-of-use for brain-dead managers wins over security any day.