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166<br />

Part III: Installing a <strong>Wireless</strong> Network<br />

How about a bit more about WEP?<br />

WEP encrypts your data so that no one can read it unless they have the key.<br />

That’s the theory behind WEP, anyway. WEP has been a part <strong>of</strong> Wi-Fi networks<br />

from the beginning. (The developers <strong>of</strong> Wi-Fi were initially focused on<br />

the business market, where data security has always been a big priority.) The<br />

name itself belies the intentions <strong>of</strong> the system’s developers; they wanted to<br />

make wireless networks as secure as wired networks.<br />

To make WEP work, you must activate it on all the Wi-Fi devices on your network<br />

via the client s<strong>of</strong>tware or configuration program that came with the<br />

hardware. And every device on your network must use the same WEP key<br />

to gain access to the network. (We talk a bit more about how to turn on WEP<br />

in the later section, “Clamping Down on Your <strong>Wireless</strong> <strong>Home</strong> Network’s<br />

Security.”)<br />

For the most part, WEP is WEP is WEP. In other words, it doesn’t matter<br />

which vendor made your access point or which vendor made your laptop’s<br />

PC Card network adapter — the implementation <strong>of</strong> WEP is standardized<br />

across vendors. Keep this one difference in mind, however: WEP key length.<br />

Encryption keys are categorized by the number <strong>of</strong> bits (1s or 0s) used to<br />

create the key. Most Wi-Fi equipment these days uses 128-bit WEP keys, but<br />

some early gear (such as the first generation <strong>of</strong> Apple AirPort equipment)<br />

supported only a 64-bit WEP key.<br />

Many access points and network adapters on the market support even longer<br />

keys — for example, many vendors support a 256-bit key. The longest standard<br />

key, however, is 128 bits. Most equipment enables you to decide how<br />

long to make your WEP key; you can <strong>of</strong>ten choose between 64 and 128 bits.<br />

Generally, for security purposes, you should choose the longest key available.<br />

If, however, you have some older gear that can’t support longer WEP<br />

key lengths, you can use a shorter key. If you have one network adapter that<br />

can handle only 64-bit keys but have an access point that can handle 128-bit<br />

keys, you need to set up the access point to use the shorter, 64-bit key length.<br />

Should you use WEP?<br />

WEP sounds like a pretty good deal, doesn’t it? It keeps your data safe while<br />

it’s floating through the ether by encrypting it, and it keeps others <strong>of</strong>f your<br />

access point by not authenticating them. But, as we mention earlier in this<br />

chapter, WEP isn’t all that secure because flaws in the protocol’s design make<br />

it not all that hard for someone to crack your WEP code and gain access to<br />

your network and your data. For a typical home network, a bad guy with the<br />

right tools could capture enough data flowing across your network to crack<br />

WEP in a matter <strong>of</strong> hours.

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