My WiFi shows as unprotected

How do I secure my home WiFi and why isn’t it automatically defaulted to secure when I purchased my hardware ( router) from xfinity?

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Posted on Aug 23, 2023 8:49 PM

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5 replies

Aug 23, 2023 8:52 PM in response to CharSopo

Check your WiFi Router / Modem for --> Recommended settings for Wi-Fi routers and access points ...


Consider more secure wifi configuration.

Change your router’s WiFi to use WPA2-AES (CCMP) with no WPA or TKIP. Updating this setting ensures that your devices always connect in one encryption mode


  1. TKIP is obsolete and not considered secure. Choose WPA2, the latest encryption standard, with AES encryption for optimal security
  2. If your router doesn’t specify TKIP or AES, the WPA2 option probably uses AES


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Aug 23, 2023 9:09 PM in response to SravanKrA

SravanKrA wrote:

Consider more secure wifi configuration.1.
Change your router’s WiFi to use WPA2-AES (CCMP) with no WPA or TKIP. Updating this setting ensures that your devices always connect in one encryption mode

TKIP is obsolete and not considered secure. Choose WPA2, the latest encryption standard, with AES encryption for optimal security
2. If your router doesn’t specify TKIP or AES, the WPA2 option probably uses AES


These days, there's WPA3.


https://www.howtogeek.com/339765/what-is-wpa3-and-when-will-i-get-it-on-my-wi-fi/


But yes, WEP with static encryption keys is very easily broken. TKIP was introduced to have something stronger than WEP that didn't instantly break all of the network equipment vendor's hardware. (A lot of the hardware that was shipping around the time TKIP came out couldn't handle AES encryption.)


AES of some form is what you want.


Aug 23, 2023 9:04 PM in response to CharSopo

If your WiFi router is set up so that it allows anyone to connect without providing a password, you need to change the settings on the router.


You need to know your router's IP address and password. A lot of routers have internal IP addresses allocated in the private address range 192.168.*.* – 192.168.0.1 is typical. The password is something you'd need to get from xfinity or from the router's user manual. (If you own the router and it is using a default password, especially one such as "password", you may want to change that password as well as setting up WiFi security.)


Note that if you're using WiFi to connect the router whose settings you are changing, and you mess up changes, there is a risk of locking yourself out. (Even just turning on security might force you off WiFi right then and there, forcing you to rejoin with the new password to continue, so be ready for that.)


https://www.lifewire.com/accessing-your-router-at-home-818205

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My WiFi shows as unprotected

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