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Is it possible to deploy a secure wireless LAN with technology available today? That question preys on the minds of IT executives who are tempted to deploy enterprise WLANs, but are hesitant because of security concerns.
So we assembled 23 wireless products from 17 vendors and ran them through a battery of tests aimed at getting the answer.
Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) is very weak in many products, and we don't recommend using it other than in very specialized cases. WEP's successor, Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) has flaws but provides solid security when combined with 802.1X authentication and deployed carefully. Ultimately, 802.11i, the standard that replaces WEP and WPA, will provide all the tools needed to protect WLANs.
To their credit, vendors are aggressively shipping products at all prices that support enterprise-class security features. Two-thirds of the products tested support 802.1X, and vendors are moving rapidly to comply with 802.11i standards.
Security picks
In this case, we focused entirely on security, and based on our testing, we drew some conclusions about which products would
be the most secure additions to your network.
What we tested
The details on 23 products that we put under a security microscope with our battery of tests.
WEP: Stick a fork in it
Tests show some vendors are lax about plugging WEP holes.
802.1X: A stepping stone
As an authentication standard for wired networks, 802.1X has a happy side effect when used with WLANs: It gives you per-user,
per-session WEP keys.
WPA - An accident waiting to happen
WPA can be a better option. Unfortunately, the easiest way to use it actually makes it easier to crack than WEP.
802.11i: The next big thing
The IEEE standard called Robust Security Networking is a force to be reckoned with.
Security standards aside, lock down your boxes, boys!
To build a secure wireless network, it's not enough to watch the airwaves. You must lock down the access points, much like
the rest of your network infrastructure.
Wireless Access Point: Wire-side security testing (PDF)
Find out which of the 15 access points and wireless switch vendors leave the back door to your WLAN wide open.
How to do it: Securing your wireless LAN
We're left with the question: How do you secure your WLAN?
Comments (7)
i need the WEP for MTN Nigeria codeBy Anonymous on November 26, 2008, 12:42 pmi need the WEP for MTN Nigeria code
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your commentBy Anonymous on October 30, 2008, 4:09 ambullshit as if fagget
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cracking wireless networkBy Anonymous on October 22, 2008, 8:53 pmhey i wanna to crack some codes fr wireless networks coz my hpdv 6000 catch some signals of wireless networks but all are secured ............ how to crack these...
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wirelessBy Anonymous on October 19, 2008, 6:50 amHOW CAN I BREAK WI-FIS' SERVERS CODE.I WANT TO ENTER TO WI-FI SERVER,BUT IT IS LOCKOED BY SERVER.I WANT TO ENTER TO WI-FI AND WORK WITH ENTERNET.PLEASE IF U KNOW...
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QUESTIONBy Anonymous on August 9, 2008, 3:01 pmHOW DO I GET THE SECURITY CODES FOR THE WIRELESS CONNECTIONS?
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