enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Wireless configuration utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless_configuration_utility

    Desktop, Workstation, Server, Windows users Microsoft Wireless Zero Configuration [10] Microsoft October 25, 2001 (with Windows XP) PEAP-ELS, PEAP-MS-CHAP v2 WEP, WPA,WPA2 ver Free Windows XP, Windows Server 2003: none Desktop, Workstation, Server, Windows users Dell Wireless LAN Card Utility [11] Dell N/A N/A WEP, WPA,WPA2 ver 3.0 Free Windows

  3. Wi-Fi Protected Access - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-Fi_Protected_Access

    WPA-Personal and WPA2-Personal remain vulnerable to password cracking attacks if users rely on a weak password or passphrase. WPA passphrase hashes are seeded from the SSID name and its length; rainbow tables exist for the top 1,000 network SSIDs and a multitude of common passwords, requiring only a quick lookup to speed up cracking WPA-PSK. [34]

  4. Wireless security - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wireless_security

    The WPA profile also provides optional support for the AES-CCMP algorithm that is the preferred algorithm in 802.11i and WPA2. WPA Enterprise provides RADIUS based authentication using 802.1X. WPA Personal uses a pre-shared Shared Key to establish the security using an 8 to 63 character passphrase. The PSK may also be entered as a 64 character ...

  5. wpa_supplicant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wpa_supplicant

    wpa_supplicant is a free software implementation of an IEEE 802.11i supplicant for Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, QNX, AROS, Microsoft Windows, Solaris, OS/2 (including ArcaOS and eComStation) [2] and Haiku. [3] In addition to being a WPA3 and WPA2 supplicant, it also implements WPA and older wireless LAN security protocols.

  6. Pre-shared key - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pre-shared_key

    A sufficiently long, randomly chosen, key can resist any practical brute force attack, though not in principle if an attacker has sufficient computational power (see password strength and password cracking for more discussion). Unavoidably, however, pre-shared keys are held by both parties to the communication, and so can be compromised at one ...

  7. Mobile security - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_security

    WPA is based on the Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP), which was designed to allow migration from WEP to WPA on the equipment already deployed. The major improvements in security are the dynamic encryption keys. For small networks, the WPA uses a "pre-shared key" which is based on a shared key. Encryption can be vulnerable if the length of ...

  8. Wi-Fi Protected Setup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wi-Fi_Protected_Setup

    The WPS push button (center, blue) on a wireless router showing the symbol defined by the Wi-Fi Alliance for this function. Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS), originally Wi-Fi Simple Config, is a network security standard to create a secure wireless home network.

  9. Key finder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_finder

    Early models of key finder were sound-based, and listened for a clap or whistle (or a sequence of same), then beeped for the user to find them. Determining what was a clap or a whistle proved difficult, resulting in poor performance and false alarms. Because of this low quality and unreliability, these early key finders were soon discarded and ...