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Safe & Responsible Computing |
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Safe & Responsible Computing Home |
The information on this
page was prepared by a previous Capstone team and is an important part
of Safe & Responsible Computing.
Wireless networking is the newest craze fro home computing. It
really makes getting on the Internet more convenient. You don't have to
rewire your house to have multiple computers in different rooms communicate
with each other. Wireless can also introduce some security risks. Be Aware,
Be Smart and Stay Safe! Wireless Routers /
Access Point Interference within the Home Wireless Routers /
Access Point Interference from Outside In the MAC Address
Filtering Wireless Adapter
Profiles WEP Encryption Can't reach the
Internet? §
Temporarily turn off your firewall to determine whether
you have a firewall configuration problem, or some other issue. §
Likewise, turn on and test your wireless adapters one by
one, to determine if problems are isolated to a single computer or common to
all. §
Try ad hoc networking if infrastructure networking isn't
functional, and perhaps you'll identify a problem with your access point or
router. To help you work methodically, as you build your network,
write down on paper the key settings like network name, WEP passkey, MAC
addresses, and channel numbers. Don't worry about making mistakes; you can go back and alter
any of your WLAN settings any time. Finally, don't be surprised if your
wireless LAN performance doesn't match the numbers quoted by the
manufacturer. For example, although 802.11b equipment technically supports 11
Mbps bandwidth, that is a theoretical maximum never achieved in practice. A
significant amount of Wi-Fi network bandwidth is consumed by overhead that
you cannot control. Expect to see more than about one-half the maximum
bandwidth (5.5 Mbps at most for 802.11b, about 20 Mbps at most for the
others) on your home WLAN. MAC address filtering combined with WEP encryption offers very
good home wireless network security protection. Most wireless access points go in place behind a firewall.
That makes it very convenient for hackers if they happen to attach to your
wireless access point. In most home network cases, there is no more
protection past the firewall. If you notice other wireless network signals available, talk
to your neighbors. If you can see their network who else can? Can they see
your network? |