EPurpl3: I dont, i'm guessing i'm too young.
Next person has a basketball basket in the room.
I don't have a basketball basket.
Next person uses a consumer grade router at their home (Linksys/D-link/netgear or other similar brands of consumer grade routers) which has Internet facing security vulnerabilities that allow it to potentially be exploited and infected by botnets or for other nefarious purposes. Either the vendor has put out security updates for the router which the person has not installed on the router, or the vendor has never bothered to fix the security flaws either because the hardware is considered too old and no longer supported, or they simply don't care about security.
This is admittedly a bit more challenging for someone to acknowledge or dis-acknowledge because it involves looking up your router's make and model number and searching Google for known security issues with the router and the vendor's website to see if a firmware update is available. Since it might take some time to determine this, I would recommend submitting a comment here as a placeholder first so someone else doesn't respond while you're doing research on your router. :)
I thought I might spice things up a bit and at the same time increase awareness of the inherent and often unknown (to the owner) insecurity present in consumer grade networking hardware which can be exploited by malicious people (most often using botnets).