Verizon MI424WR User Manual

Page 74

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69

Chapter 5 Using Network Connections

Support Unencrypted Password (PAP) Password Authentication Protocol (

PAP

)

is a simple, plain-text authentication scheme. The user name and password are
requested by the networking peer in plain-text.

PAP

, however, is not a secure

authentication protocol. Man-in-the-middle attacks can easily determine the
remote access client’s password.

PAP

offers no protection against replay attacks,

remote client impersonation, or remote server impersonation.

Support Challenge Handshake Authentication (CHAP) Click in this check box to
activate

CHAP

, a challenge-response authentication protocol that uses

MD5

to

hash the response to a challenge.

CHAP

protects against replay attacks by using

an arbitrary challenge string per authentication attempt.

Support Microsoft CHAP Click in this check box if communicating with a peer
that uses Microsoft

CHAP

authentication protocol.

Support Microsoft CHAP Version 2 Select this check box if communicating with a
peer that uses Microsoft

CHAP

Version 2 authentication protocol.

PPP Compression
The

PPP

Compression Control Protocol (

CCP

) is responsible for configuring,

enabling, and disabling data compression algorithms on both ends of the point-
to-point link. It is also used to signal a failure of the compression/ decompres-
sion mechanism in a reliable manner.

For each compression algorithm (BSD and Deflate), select one of the following
from the drop-down list:

Reject Selecting this option rejects

PPP

connections with peers that use the com-

pression algorithm. If Reject is activated, throughput may diminish.

Allow Selecting this option allows

PPP

connections with peers that use the com-

pression algorithm.

Require Selecting this option insures a connection with a peer using the com-
pression algorithm.

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