Instruction manual

Glossary of Terms
250
XBLUE Networks
13
Wireless Security –
Open
no encryption
not recommended
Shared
each device on the wireless network must use the same “Shared” authentication key.
This should be considered rudimentary security.
802.1x
is a Port based authentication which generally requires a client application, which
authenticates to a specified server (RADIUS) before being allowed to connect to the wireless
access point.
WEP
Wired Equivalent Privacy
One of the original wireless encryption protocols, which was
thought to be secure. Today, with a minor investment, it can be cracked pretty quickly. This should
be considered basic security.
WPA
Wi-Fi Protected Access
an “intermediate measure” security protocol created by the
Wi-Fi Alliance, which is found to be more secure than WEP.
TKIP
Temporal Key Integrity Protocol
Was added to WPA and is backwards compatible
with older WEP devices, but can be infiltrated with re-injection and spoofing.
PSK
Pre-Shared Key (RFC 4785)
can be convenient when managing a closed network for
easier authentication.
WPA2
The second version of WPA, which is more secure, but does not always work with older
wireless installations.
AES
Advanced Encryption Standard
Block Cipher encryption which was adopted by the US
Government, and now used world wide for security.
RADIUS
(RFC 2865) Remote Authentication Dial in User Service
is a client/server pro-
tocol using centralized authentication, which requires a network server for all endpoints that con-
nect to the network. This is done in the application layer, using UDP packets.
RADIUS Port
The “Well Known Ports” for sending UDP packets are 1812 and 1645 depending
on the network installation and the server.