turned on WPA but network stumbler says WEP?!

WPA is nothing more than WEP encryption, with a much improved group key exchange mechanism, and 802.1x RADIUS authentication added. If you're just looking at the encrypted data packets floating by, WEP and WPA look exactly the same RC4 cipher stream. When the new an improved

802.11i encryption standard eventually becomes available, the encryption will change to AES which will hopefully be recognizeable by Netstumbler.
Reply to
Jeff Liebermann
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Reply to
Airhead

I have a belkin 802.11g wireless router. I turned on WPA on both the router and my laptop (has built-in 802.11b wireless not made by belkin) and it works fine.

However, when I put network stumbler on a different laptop, it says the router is using WEP. What gives?

Reply to
peter

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