You have a wireless access point that is configured to use Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)
security. A pre-shared key is not configured on the wireless access point.
You need to connect a computer that runs Windows 7 to the wireless access point.
Which security setting should you select for the wireless connection?
A.
802.1x
B.
WPA-Personal
C.
WPA2-Enterprise
D.
WPA2-Personal
Explanation:
WPA and WPA2 indicate compliance with the security protocol created by the Wi-Fi Alliance to
secure wireless computer networks. WPA2 enhances WPA, which in turn addresses weaknesses in
the previous system, WEP. WPA was intended as an intermediate measure to take the place of WEP
while an IEEE 802.11i standard was prepared. 802.1X provides port-based authentication, which
involves communications between a supplicant (a client computer), an authenticator (a wired
Ethernet switch or WAP), and an authentication server (typically a Remote Authentication Dial In
User Service, or RADIUS, server).
WPA2-Enterprise
WPA-Enterprise and WPA2-Enterprise authenticate through the Extensible Authentication Protocol
(EAP) and require computer security certificates rather than PSKs. The following EAP types are
included in the certification program:
– EAP-TLS
– EAP-TTLS/MSCHAPv2
– PEAPv0/EAP-MSCHAPv2
– PEAPv1/EAP-GTC
– EAP-SIM
If you want to use AES and to use computer certificates rather than a PSK, you would choose WPA2-
Enterprise.
WPA2-Personal
If you have a small network that is not in a domain and cannot access a CA server, but you install a
modern
WAP that supports AES, you would use WPA2-Personal (with a PSK).
WPA-Personal
If you have a small network that is not in a domain and cannot access a CA server and your WAP
does not support AES, you would use WPA-Personal.
802.1x
If you have a RADIUS server on your network to act as an authentication server and you want the
highest possible level of security, you would choose 802.1X.