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Wireless Home Networking - Index of

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Planning Security<br />

Chapter 4: Planning a <strong>Wireless</strong> <strong>Home</strong> Network<br />

Any network can be attacked by a persistent hacker, but a well-defended network<br />

discourages most hackers sufficiently to keep your data safe. However,<br />

it’s easier for a hacker to gain access through the air to a wireless network<br />

than to gain physical access to a wired network, making wireless networks,<br />

and even home networks, more vulnerable to attack. Because a Wi-Fi signal<br />

is a radio signal, it keeps going and going and going, like ripples in a pond,<br />

in a weaker and weaker form until it hits something solid enough to stop it.<br />

Anyone with a portable PC, wireless network adapter, and an external antenna<br />

in a van driving by your house, or even a neighbor with this equipment, has a<br />

reasonable chance <strong>of</strong> accessing your wireless network. (Such skullduggery is<br />

known as war driving.) So, you must plan for security. We give you all the<br />

down-and-dirty details in Chapter 9, but here are some key things to keep<br />

in mind:<br />

� Internet security: Any Internet connection — especially always-on broadband<br />

connections, but dial-up connections, too — can be vulnerable to<br />

attacks arriving from the Internet. To keep your PCs safe from the bad<br />

folks (who may be thousands <strong>of</strong> miles away), you should turn on any firewall<br />

features available in your AP or router. Some fancier APs or routers<br />

include a highly effective kind <strong>of</strong> firewall (a stateful packet inspection [SPI]<br />

firewall), but even just the basic firewall provided by any NAT router can<br />

be quite effective. You should also consider installing antivirus s<strong>of</strong>tware<br />

as well as personal firewall s<strong>of</strong>tware on each PC or Mac on your network<br />

for an extra level <strong>of</strong> protection.<br />

� Airlink security: This is a special need <strong>of</strong> a wireless home network. Wired<br />

networks can be made secure by what’s known as physical security. That<br />

is, you literally lock your doors and windows, and no one can plug into<br />

your wired network. In the wireless world, physical security is impossible<br />

(you can’t wrangle those radio waves and keep them in the house), so<br />

you need to implement airlink security. You can’t keep the radio waves<br />

from getting out <strong>of</strong> the house, but you can make it hard for someone to<br />

do anything with them (like read the data they contain). Similarly, you<br />

can use airlink security to keep others from getting onto your access<br />

point and freeloading on your Internet connection. The primary means<br />

<strong>of</strong> providing airlink security — and advances are on the way — is called<br />

WPA2 (Wi-Fi Protected Access). You absolutely should use WPA2 (and do<br />

a few other tricks that we discuss in Chapter 9) to preserve the integrity<br />

<strong>of</strong> your wireless home network.<br />

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