George, I have been experimenting with Wifi on Linux for a few weeks and I have to say I have not had much success (with anything faster than 802.11b with WEP). However, regarding security, my typical steps for securing the connection are: 1) Use WPA-PSK minimum for encryption. If you're on Linux, this may not be possible, so use WEP 128-bit. 2) Set the router's MAC address filtering to only accepts known MAC addresses and deny all others. 3) Do not broadcast your SSID. 4) Change the name of your router. A lot of manufacturers put the router model name in this field, like my Linksys WRT54G. There's no sense telling anyone who does find your network what model your using. I am not an expert, but this has worked pretty well for all the wireless routers I have setup. Does anyone else have any suggestions? On Tue, 1 Feb 2005 18:30:52 -0700, George wrote: > Someone posted on this list (I think) a comment that allowed me to infer > that WEP in and of it's self is not good enough. > > The options on the router seem to be: > disable (default) > WEP > 802.1x and RADIUS > WPA-PSK > WPA > > What other steps might be well advised in order to "lock down" the network? > -- Donn "Sarcasm is the safe alternative to expressing anger." --Richard North Patterson --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss