Using the belkin wireless networking utility, Se ct io n – Belkin F5D9050 User Manual

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Using the Belkin Wireless Networking Utility

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At the time of publication, four Encryption Methods are available:

Encryption Methods:

Name

64-Bit Wired
Equivalent Privacy

128-Bit
Encryption

Wi-Fi
Protected
Access-TKIP

Wi-Fi
Protected
Access 2

Acronym

64-bit WEP

128-bit WEP

WPA-TKIP/
AES (or just
WPA)

WPA2-AES (or
just WPA2)

Security

Good

Better

Best

Best

Features

Static keys

Static keys

Dynamic key
encryption
and mutual
authentication

Dynamic key
encryption
and mutual
authentication

Encryption keys
based on RC4
algorithm (typically
40-bit keys)

More secure
than 64-bit
WEP using a
key length of
104 bits plus
24 additional
bits of system-
generated data

TKIP
(Temporal
Key Integrity
Protocol)
added so
that keys are
rotated and
encryption is
strengthened

AES
(Advanced
Encryption
Standard)
does not
cause any
throughput
loss

WEP

WEP is a common protocol that adds security to all
Wi-Fi-compliant wireless products. WEP gives 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.

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