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Ars Technica: Wireless Security Blackpaper

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Scan day: 07 February 2014 UTC
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Description: Article covering basic 802.11b security, WEP, MAC address filtering, broadcast key rotation and EAP based standards.
Wireless Security Blackpaper | Ars Technica Civilization & Discontents The state of smartphones in 2013. Log in to track your discussions. The ins and outs of wireless network security. In 1999 the IEEE completed and approved the standard known as 802.11b, and WLANs were born. Finally, computer networks could achieve connectivity with a useable amount of bandwidth without being networked via a wall socket. Suddenly connecting multiple computers in a house to share an Internet connection or play LAN games no longer required expensive or ugly cabling. Business users could get up out of their chairs and sit in the sunshine while they worked. New generations of handheld devices allowed users access to stored data as they walked down the hall to a meeting. The dawn of networking elegance was upon us. Users could set their laptops down anywhere and instantly be granted access to all networking resources. This was, and is, the vision of wireless networks, and what they are capable of delivering.
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Page title:Wireless Security Blackpaper | Ars Technica
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Description:The ins and outs of wireless network security.
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