| WEP (Wired Equivalent Protocol) |
- Protects data over wireless networks
- Provides no protection past the SonicWall appliance
- Provides minimum protection for transmitted dat
- Uses a static key for encryption
- Useful for older legacy devices, PDAs, wireless printers
- Not recommended for deployments needing a high degree of security
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| WPA2 (Wi-Fi Protected Access, v2) |
- Transition mode as Intermediate Security Standard (Uses AES)
- For use with trusted corporate wireless clients
- Transparent authentication with Windows log-in
- Client software install might be necessary in some cases
- Supports 802.11i WPA/WPA2 EAP authentication mode
- No backend authentication needed after first log-in (allows for faster roaming)
- Supports two protocols for storing and generating keys: PSK (Pre-Shared Key) and EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol)
EAP support is only available in Access Point Mode (selected on the DEVICE | Internal Wireless > Settings page). EAP support is not available in Bridge Mode.
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| WPA2-AUTO |
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| WPA3 |
- WPA3 is a WFA Strong security standard for personal and enterprise networks
- It improves Wi-Fi security by using modern security algorithms and stronger cipher suites.
- Supports the following protocols for storing and generating keys: PSK (Pre-Shared Key), EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol), and OWE (opportunistic wireless encryption)
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| WPA3/WPA2 |
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| WPA3-EAP-192B |
- The 192-bit security mode offered by WPA3-Enterprise ensures the right combination of cryptographic tools are used and sets a consistent baseline of security within a WPA3 network.
- Uses extensible authentication protocol.
- Transition mode as Intermediate Security Standard.
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