Mailing List os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com Archived Message #404

From: "Ray Davison" <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> Full Headers
Undecoded message
Subject: Re: [OS2Wireless] Router security
Date: Sun, 01 Mar 2009 11:39:44 -0800
To: OS/2 Wireless Users Mailing List <os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com>

Lewis G Rosenthal wrote:

wife was issued an XP pro laptop.  She claims she brought it home,
opened IE, and it connected to the WEB.  Is this reasonable?

WEP64 should have at least kept the XP box from passing traffic.

Wireless encryption or some authentication of some sort would block traffic from entering - and passing through - your router to the internet and your LAN (couldn't even send a print job to a network-attached printer).

I thought the posts from you and Neil below - plus Bob's recent post - had to do with using a MAC address system to keep out "innocent wanderers".  But it seems that activating any security that changes the available network listing from public to private would keep them from accessing either your LAN or internet connection.  So how would the white list keep them out more?

Hmmm... This shouldn't be. Check that the dopey Windows firewall
isn't turned on. (Kill it from Control Panel.)

Yes it was, and now I am connected.

Ray

****************
On Thu, 19 Feb 2009 19:47:16 -0500, "Lewis G Rosenthal"
<os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com> wrote:

Neil has a small built-in safeguard against a man-in-the-middle
(MTM) attack. As MAC addresses can easily be forged, creating a
generic whitelist of MAC addresses is weak security, at best. By
going Neil's route, *all* clients are forbidden to attach until he
disables the security. At that point, he lets the client connect,
adds that single MAC to the whitelist, and away he goes. Unless
someone is trying to access the network at that exact moment (with
*his* MAC), he should be reasonable assured that he's the only one
connected.

I don't need much security here. I'm just trying to get the neighbors to
connect to their access point and me to my access point. I built a few
laptops for people, and I heard Ray's beeping each time I finished the install and the WiFi attempted to connect.

Neil

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