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Authored by: JamesK on Wednesday, October 03 2012 @ 12:04 PM EDT |
It's still not security, unless you're using it 24/7.
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The following program contains immature subject matter. Viewer discretion is
advised.[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: jadamslsmo on Wednesday, October 03 2012 @ 05:52 PM EDT |
Here's my solution: I have a CentOS box with two NICs, one DMZ'd and the other
internal and is my DHCP server. That internal NIC has two IP ranges. In
dhcpd.conf I use MAC addressing to assign the computer to the 10.* range. If the
MAC isn't listed, it get a 192.* address. I only have one access point with
WPA2. If you can crack the PW, you will get access to the internet but not the
computers (and tablets and BR players...) in my house.
Is this supremo security? Heck no, but it does put an extra step in place for
the determined hacker to get around. There is more to my setup but I set this up
years ago so I don't remember all of them (I just have to edit dhcpd.conf as
needed.)[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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