Securing Your Wi-Fi Network - Belkin F5D7230-4 User Manual

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Using the Web-Based Advanced User Interface
Securing your Wi-Fi
Here are a few different ways you can maximize the security of
your wireless network and protect your data from prying eyes and
ears. This section is intended for the home, home office, and small
office user. At the time of this manual's publication, there are three
encryption methods available.
Name
64-bit Wired
Equivalent
Privacy
Acronym
64-bit WEP
Security
Good
Features
Static keys
Encryption
keys based
on RC4
algorithm
(typically
40-bit keys)
WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy)
WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) is a common protocol that adds
security to all Wi-Fi-compliant wireless products. WEP was designed
to give wireless networks the equivalent level of privacy protection as
a comparable wired network.
64-Bit WEP
64-bit WEP was first introduced with 64-bit encryption, which
includes a key length of 40 bits plus 24 additional bits of
system-generated data (64 bits total). Some hardware manufacturers
refer to 64-bit as 40-bit encryption. Shortly after the technology was
introduced, researchers found that 64-bit encryption was too easy
to decode.
Network
®
128-bit Wired
Equivalent
Privacy
128-bit WEP
Better
Static keys
More secure
than 64-bit
WEP using a
key length of
104 bits plus
24 additional
bits of system
generated
data.
49
49
Wi-Fi Protected
With Protected
Access-TKIP
Access
WPA-TKIP
WPA-AES
Best
Best
Dynamic key
Dynamic key
encryption
encryption
and mutual
and mutual
authentication.
authentication.
TKIP (temporal
AES (Advanced
key integrity
Encryption
protocol)
Standard) does
added so
not cause any
that keys are
throughput
rotated and
loss.
encryption is
strengthened.
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