Hi everyone,
First, I want to say that I am a very novice to wireless network. So, those who take his/her valuable time helping me, please say a little bit more details for each step. Thanks a lot.
Every time I was in the hotel, bookstore, restaraunt, etc, I can access to the wireless network to browse from there. When I click on the I.E, it pops up a welcome login screen and tells me to log in. After I login, I can browse fine. So, I think that's so cool and very secure wireless network.
I just got a Wireless Netgear Router at home and I want to do the secure wireless network like the way they do. I read thoroughly the Manual and learning something like MAC filtering, SSID, WEP, ect... But none of those is actually asking the user to enter user name and the password before he/she can access to the network. I know I may already have confused you guys. But my point is How to set up the wireless network that will ask the user for the ID and password before he/she can browse the web? Please help. Very appreciate that.
You *can* do this, but it's not a trivial task. You could change the firmware on the Netgear router, but this would require some high-level knowledge of Linux. Basically you'd add NoCatNet to the system and then you'd have the cool authentication thing.
Cheers,
Rob
Links: NoCatNet, http://nocat.net/
http://nocat.net/
There are other solutions like this. Google them.
Bob
you didn't give the wireless router model so I'll tell you about a general security feature, WEP encoded passwords. All routers can be configured to require a password to connect. Basically the wireless software will detect the broadcasted router name but when they try to connect it will require a password. Now if password protection is all you need I suggest you go back to your router manual and learn how to enable it. And please, PLEASE, don't make it the same as the router name... I've found so many router's with that simple to hack password in New York City as I use my laptop in the parks
Now, I have a netgear WGR614v4 wireless router. Aside from the standard security feature (WEP encrypted password) it has a "cloak" feature where you can make the wireless signal only detectable to pre-set computers i.e. it doesn't broadcast the router's name. It only allows the pre-set computers (pre-set by MAC address) to recognize the wireless signal
I've had friends bring their wireless laptops and search for a signal... they can find the neighbor's signal but not mine. And if I take the "cloak" off they would still need the password to connect i.e. they have to login.
I hope this is what you want since its much easier than messing around with the firmware on your router.
These measures make your wireless network secure against someone randomly happening upon it and connecting. The "bad guys" can still get in no sweat.
WEP is easily crackable in a matter of minutes with programs like AirSnort...and a sniffer will easily find a non-associative SSID.
Even if you set up the router to "filter by MAC address," it's still VERY easy for someone to watch every bit of traffic you send and recieve.
WEP is better than nothing, but it's only useful to prevent casual access to your access point. If your router and cards support WPA, that would be a much better way to go.
A false sense of security is worse than none.
G
If your router and network card support it, your best bet is to set up WPA-PSK encryption. Most recent wireless systems can handle this.
Anything WEP (''Wired Equivalency Protocol'') can be easily found and compromised, within a few minutes...there's no way to protect WEP from eavesdropping. WPA is a much better way to go.
The kind of password page you're looking at is usually associated with a ''proxy'' setup. If you're setting up a ''public'' access point, it would be worth setting up a proxy and using that sort of authentication. That's a different discussion, though, and it's beyond the scope of most home and small-office systems.
G
Thank you so much for all your help. I really appreciate that. I did the research and found out the good way to secure wireless is using ZoneCD. The reason I want this is I have more than 10 users who heavily use my network. That's why I want to be able to have a centrailized control point for the wireless. So, ZoneCD is the best, I think. Check it out bro. Please give me your feedback/comments about that. Thank you.
www.publicip.com
ZoneCD is great stuff. Sorry I didn't note it but my mind was full.
Bob
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