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170<br />

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

wired connection and doing all your access point configuration in this manner.<br />

That way, you can avoid accidentally blocking yourself from the access point<br />

when your settings begin to take effect.<br />

Getting rid <strong>of</strong> the defaults<br />

It’s incredibly common to go to a Web site like Netstumbler.com, look at the<br />

results <strong>of</strong> someone’s Wi-Fi reconnoitering trip around their neighborhood,<br />

and see dozens <strong>of</strong> access points with the same service set identifier (SSID, or<br />

network name; refer to Chapter 2). And it’s usually Linksys because Linksys is<br />

the most popular vendor out there (though NETGEAR, D-Link, and others are<br />

also well represented). Many folks bring home an access point, plug it in, turn<br />

it on, and then do nothing. They leave everything as it was set up from the<br />

factory. They don’t change any default settings.<br />

Well, if you want people to be able to find your access point, there’s nothing<br />

better (short <strong>of</strong> a sign on the front door) than leaving your default SSID<br />

broadcasting out there for the world to see. In some cities, you could probably<br />

drive all the way across town with a laptop set to Linksys as an SSID<br />

and stay connected the entire time. (We don’t mean to just pick on Linksys<br />

here. You could probably do the same thing with an SSID set to default, the<br />

D-Link default, or any <strong>of</strong> the top vendors’ default settings.)<br />

When you begin your security crusade, the first thing you should do is to<br />

change all the defaults on your access point. You should change, at minimum,<br />

the following:<br />

� Your default SSID<br />

� Your default administrative password<br />

If you don’t change the administrative password, someone who gains access<br />

to your network can guess at your password and end up changing all the settings<br />

in your access point without your knowing. Heck, if they want to teach<br />

you a security lesson — the tough love approach, we guess — they could<br />

even block you out <strong>of</strong> the network until you reset the access point. These<br />

default passwords are well known and well publicized. Just look on the Web<br />

page <strong>of</strong> your vendor, and we bet you can find a copy <strong>of</strong> the user’s guide for<br />

your access point available for download. Anyone who wants to know them<br />

does know them.<br />

When you change the default SSID on your access point to one <strong>of</strong> your own<br />

making, you also need to change the SSID setting <strong>of</strong> any computers (or other<br />

devices) that you want to connect to your LAN. To do this, follow the steps<br />

we discuss in this part’s earlier chapters.

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