A.15 what is wi-fi protected access (wpa), A.16 what is wpa2, A.17 what is 802.1x authentication – PLANET WNAP-7350 User Manual

Page 91: A.19 what is advanced encryption standard (aes)

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User Manual of WNAP-7350

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run that way to enhance network security. However it's no replacement for WEP, MAC filtering or other

protections.

A.15 What is Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA)?

Wi-Fi’s original security mechanism, Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP), has been viewed as insufficient for

securing confidential business communications. A longer-term solution, the IEEE 802.11i standard, is under

development. However, since the IEEE 802.11i standard is not expected to be published until the end of 2003,

several members of the WI-Fi Alliance teamed up with members of the IEEE 802.11i task group to develop a

significant near-term enhancement to Wi-Fi security. Together, this team developed Wi-Fi Protected Access.

To upgrade a WLAN network to support WPA, Access Points will require a WPA software upgrade. Clients will

require a software upgrade for the network interface card, and possibly a software update for the operating

system. For enterprise networks, an authentication server, typically one that supports RADIUS and the selected

EAP authentication protocol, will be added to the network.

A.16 What is WPA2?

It is the second generation of WPA. WPA2 is based on the final IEEE 802.11i amendment to the 802.11
standard.

A.17 What is 802.1x Authentication?

802.1x is a framework for authenticated MAC-level access control, defines Extensible Authentication Protocol

(EAP) over LANs (WAPOL). The standard encapsulates and leverages much of EAP, which was defined for

dial-up authentication with Point-to-Point Protocol in RFC 2284.

Beyond encapsulating EAP packets, the 802.1x standard also defines EAPOL messages that convey the shared

key information critical for wireless security.

A.18 What is Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP)?

The Temporal Key Integrity Protocol, pronounced tee-kip, is part of the IEEE 802.11i encryption standard for

wireless LANs. TKIP is the next generation of WEP, the Wired Equivalency Protocol, which is used to secure

802.11 wireless LANs. TKIP provides per-packet key mixing, a message integrity check and a re-keying

mechanism, thus fixing the flaws of WEP.

A.19 What is Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)?

Security issues are a major concern for wireless LANs, AES is the U.S. government’s next-generation

cryptography algorithm, which will replace DES and 3DES.

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