Wireless Cable Modem Gateway CG814WG v3 Reference Manual
Table
Settings |
| Description |
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Security Options | Disable | Wireless security is disabled by default. After the |
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| gateway is connected to the Internet, NETGEAR |
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| strongly recommends that you implement wireless |
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| security. |
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| • WEP (Wired Equivalent | WEP security uses encryption keys. |
| Privacy) | Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) data encryption |
| • WEP (Wired Equivalent | provides data security. WEP Shared Key |
| Privacy) | authentication and WEP data encryption will block all |
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| but the most determined eavesdropper. |
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| You can select |
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| to Configure WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy)” on |
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| page |
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| WPA2 | provides data security. The very strong |
| WPA Enterprise | authentication along with dynamic per frame |
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| rekeying of WPA make it virtually impossible to |
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| compromise. Because this is a new standard, |
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| wireless device driver and software availability may |
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| be limited. |
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| server. WPA2 uses a |
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| See “How to Configure WPA” on page |
Turning on Access Control to Restrict Access by MAC Address
By default, any wireless PC that is configured with the correct SSID and WEP/WPA settings will be allowed access to your wireless network. For increased security, you can restrict access to the wireless network to only allow specific PCs based on their MAC addresses.
You can restrict access to only trusted PCs so that unknown PCs cannot wirelessly connect to the CG814WG v3 Gateway. MAC address filtering adds an obstacle against unwanted access to your network, but the data broadcast over the wireless link is fully exposed.
Wireless Configuration |
v1.0, June 2007