Generate A Wep Key From My Verizon Router

 

Router Keygen generate default WPA/WEP keys for the following router: Thomson based routers (this includes Thomson, SpeedTouch, Orange, Infinitum, BBox, DMax. Verizon FiOS (only some routers. Creating a wireless network with a Verizon MI424WR router in Windows XP Depending on when you purchased your router and the version of firmware on it, the. Feb 04, 2014 Find the lost WEP key on your wireless router. Find the lost WEP key on your wireless router. Skip navigation Sign in. This video is unavailable. Apr 04, 2016  Your older WEP wireless encryption can easily be compromised by hackers. Verizon Fios has a painless way to change your wireless network encryption from WEP to WPA2 if you log on to your Verizon. Aug 12, 2010  Well, i am getting internet connection on my ds, and i need my WEP key, but i dont know where it is located on my router, i have a LINKSYS Wireless-G Broadband Router, and i have NO clue where my WEP key is located on my router, or give me a website, but it cant include me to type in my username and password, i dont mind my password, plzz, but if its the only way then i geusse, but i.

You only need a WEP key if you connect using wireless. LAN

Apr 29, 2014  Though you must give Verizon credit for supplying step-by-step online instruction for updating your router to WPA. Verizon help does answer the question regarding the preinstalled WEP for routers and devices by stating WEP is better than no security at all. But should home internet users bear the responsibility for protecting their own networks?

connections do not require a WEP key.

You should be able to find the WEP key by accessing your

wireless router.

Usually, to do this, you need to connect to the router using an

Ethernet cable. Then open up a web browser (such as Firefox or

Internet Explorer) and browse to 192.168.2.1. This is a common IP

address for routers. However, some routers are configured

Generate A Wep Key From My Verizon Router Login

differently, so try 10.0.0.1 and 192.168.1.1 as well. If those 3 IP

addresses do not work, check Google or the manual to find your

router's default IP. NOTE - The IP codes do not work using

google chrome

If you are prompted for a password and you have changed it,

Key

enter the new user/password. If not, the most common default

user/password is admin/admin.

You should now have the setup screen for your router. Go to the

/key-generation-algorithm-for-rsa.html. 'wireless' tab and you should see your WEP key; however, it may be

encrypted. If it is, just change the WEP key to whatever you

Generate A Wep Key From My Verizon Router

want.

Note to users of Windows 7:

If your computer is connected to the router you wish to find the

Generate A Wep Key From My Verizon Router Account

WEP key of, then follow these steps.

  1. Open Network and Sharing Center by right-clicking your

    connection icon at the bottom-right corner of the screen.

  2. Click the link of the network you're connected to. (Should say

    'Wireless Network Connection 'router's name here') /cities-xl-serial-key-generator.html.

  3. Then click the button 'Wireless Properties'
  4. Then click the Security tab
  5. It should show your Security, and Encryption type. Also there

    should be your password in secret bullet form. Simply click 'Show

    characters' and Voila! Your WEP key should be staring you in the

    face.

Another way of finding the WEP:

Look on the bottom of your wireless router; the numbers that are

Generate A Wep Key From My Verizon Router Settings

between the ( ) bars are the WEP key.

Generate A Wep Key From My Verizon Router Login

xv920
join:2002-08-27
San Jose, CA

2004-Jun-19 7:57 pm

generate WEP key from passphrase

I'm looking for a wep key generator that can generate
a wep key from a passphrase - the same one - everytime
as long as the passphrase remains the same.
I tried Ben Braly's generator but it changes the key
everytime despite of using the same passphrase.
I just bought a laptop computer with an embedded G device
for which you must enter the wep key yourself, instead of
entering a passphrase and let it generate one for you.
I have been successfully using a wireless network with
one access point and two clients for last two years now
and all devices are configured with a passphrase thus
the key is automatically generated. The thing is you can
not see the generated key digits anywhere. They are all
masked by *. Now I have to enter these digits directly.
I know the passphrase. All I need is a key generator.
Thanks.

inmuck
Idiot In The East
Premium Member
join:2003-01-29
Raleigh, NC

2004-Jun-20 12:16 pm

said by xv920:I'm looking for a wep key generator that can generate a wep key from a passphrase - the same one - everytime as long as the passphrase remains the same.
Did you tried this one
»www.warewolflabs.com/por ··· skg.html

2004-Jun-21 1:44 am

I saw it while I was searching, and tried.
If you give the passphrase in the Custom WEP Key section,
it only gives you back a hexadecimal representation of
whatever you have just typed. For example, if you type
'abced', then it gives you '6162636465'. This is not how
it works. Are you kidding?
I need something that takes any-length character string
as an input passphrase and then generates 13 bytes of
information that you can use as a 128(104)-bit WEP key.
Shootist
Premium Member
join:2003-02-10
Decatur, GA

2004-Jun-21 6:14 am

2 simple facts
1. Don't use a passphrase, just make up a key, write it down, and type it in by hand.
2. There is NO embedded wireless G device, in any notebook from any manufacturer of any model. All internal wireless cards are in the MiniPCI slot and can be removed/replaced.
jpg366
join:2004-04-09
Humble, TX

2004-Jun-21 9:55 pm

to xv920
Why don't you write a small program that will xor your passphrase with a key (you pick it and embed it in your program) and clip the highest 13 bytes from the result, and display it as hex? You're after encoding, not randomness. The commercial programs do something similar but add a pseudrandom part, probably based on the system clock value.
1 edit

2004-Jun-22 12:27 pm

I don't want to change anything in existing, working
equipment. There are two wireless clients and a wireless
router up and running happily for two years and I don't
want to ruin that. A few days ago I bought a laptop
computer with a built-in wireless interface and I just
wanted to use it in my existing wireless network.
For that, why would you need to do anything in any
existing equipment? You would configure the new laptop
the same way everybody else is working, wouldn't you?
I just wanted to see this new laptop can access Internet.
Two wireless venders are mixed in this network and all 3
equipments let the user enter a passphrase and then
generate the WEP key from it. There should be a 'standard'
way to do that. I mean, to generate a WEP key from
a passphrase. I would like to write such a program myself.
Can you help me?
Foxbat121
join:2001-04-25
Herndon, VA

2004-Jun-22 2:44 pm

to xv920
Some company (I believe it is InterSil) holds the license or patent for passphrase generation. Almost all the new wireless products stop offering passphrase generation capability now to avoid paying license fee.
Shootist
Premium Member
join:2003-02-10
Decatur, GA

2004-Jun-22 3:10 pm

to xv920
You're right there should be a standard but there isn't.
efflandt
join:2002-01-25
Elgin, IL
1 edit

2004-Jun-22 7:02 pm

to xv920
Some methods generate different keys from password/passphrase than others. For example a Linux utility generates same hex key as my Linksys WAP11 v2.2 for 64(40) bit keys, but for 128(104) bit keys they differ. I think that is because Linksys generates a hex key sequence that can alternately be used for 64 or 128 bit WEP. So if you have different hardware, it is best to use actual hex keys instead of password/passphrase/ascii string.
But even when I generated hex key from passphrase for Linksys WET11, it only generated the first key. I had to fill in the blanks for the other 3 alternate keys.
Also sometimes the numbering of the keys varies. In Linux wlan-ng labels them 0-3 and Linksys labels them 1-4, so to use the second key would be key 1 for Linux and key 2 for Linksys.

Rally1
join:2000-06-12
Long Beach, CA

2004-Sep-17 5:48 pm

to inmuck
»www.clariondeveloper.com/wepgen/
sirozha
join:2001-11-18
Kennesaw, GA

2004-Sep-17 7:08 pm

to xv920
The WEP key you are talking about is a static key. Your access point or your other laptop doesn't generate the same new Hex key every time you connect. It is the same exact key that you initially entered. You could have entered it directly in Hex characters or as a passphrase. So, just access your router or your other laptop and copy the Hex key to your new laptop.
I don't understand why you need a program that generates the same Hex key every time. If there's such a program, than it would be even easier to break your WEP key (not that it is very difficult now. It takes only about 20 min to break it). But if you use this kind of program to generate the WEP key, than one could use a dictionary attack method to guess it.
Shady Bimmer
Premium Member
join:2001-12-03

2004-Sep-23 8:36 am

to xv920
said by xv920:If you give the passphrase in the Custom WEP Key section,
it only gives you back a hexadecimal representation of
whatever you have just typed. For example, if you type
'abced', then it gives you '6162636465'. This is not how
it works. Are you kidding?
Actually, that is exactly 'how it works'. If you want randomness then use the random generation buttons. If you want repeatable output based on repeatable input, then you are getting exactly what you are asking for.
I know it may not be easy to understand, but there is no difference in security given any function f that accepts input x and returns y (y=f(x)). If the function instead doubled the ascii value, modded 255, then displayed the hex representation you likely would never know the difference, yet it achieves the exact same thing as just returning the character itself.
quote: I need something that takes any-length character string
as an input passphrase and then generates 13 bytes of
information that you can use as a 128(104)-bit WEP key.
You got that at the link above.
But, to re-iterate what someone else said - why do you want something reproducable? If this is that important the link above is indeed what you want. To be honest, though, using reproducable keys is not the best practice.
Why not use a random generator to give you the correct size key then apply that key to all your devices at the same time? Then you don't need to remember the key or how it was derived. In fact it is good practice to change keys on a regular basis anyway.
Shady Bimmer

2004-Sep-23 8:46 am

to xv920
said by xv920:There are two wireless clients and a wireless
router up and running happily for two years and I don't
want to ruin that.
quote: For that, why would you need to do anything in any
existing equipment? You would configure the new laptop
the same way everybody else is working, wouldn't you?
I just wanted to see this new laptop can access Internet.
If you've had multiple devices all using the same 128-bit key for two years (never changed) then you might as well not use encryption at all (in all honesty). If someone were interested in your network they'd have broken in long ago.
The simplest method (by all means) is use a random generator to create the key you want and apply it to all the devices together.
Oh - did you actually *try* to use the hex output from the link above in your device that only accepts hex? Enter the known passphrase then copy the hex. If you have multiple vendors that each accepts a passphrase and they all work together then it is very possible they are doing nothing more than this page. At worst it simply won't work and will have cost you 2 minutes time.

RomanySaad
Premium Member
join:2001-07-31
Egypt

2004-Sep-23 10:07 am

to xv920
wep.zip
6,786 bytes
Netgear WG302 WEP Key from Passphrase Generator
This is the WEP Passphrase generator from a Netgear WG302. Is this what you are looking for?
claudeo
join:2000-02-23
Redmond, WA

2004-Sep-23 7:43 pm

to xv920
If you are mixing brands it is most likely that the hex key that is generated from the same passphrase will be different. I have never found two to match (but then I stopped looking pretty fast after realizing it was a waste of time). Just make up a hex key and use that. For WEP 128bit, you need 13 hex values, each of which is a pair of characters from the set 0123456789ABCDEF, or exactly 26 characters. You can even make it sort of mnemonic, but don't use something like 11223344. The hex values, or some of them, might correspond to letters or numbers, or not; it does not matter. Even better, make a list of several such keys and rotate them regularly.

zodiackiller
@dsl.lsan03.pacbell.n

2004-Oct-2 5:32 am

to RomanySaad
Thanks. I've been searching for something like this.
stemeyda
join:2004-01-18
Oviedo, FL

2004-Nov-2 4:18 pm

to xv920
This tool ROCKS!!!!
This tool will take an ascii passphrase of ANY length and generate a good 10 digit hex for 40 / 64 bit and will generate a 26 digit hex for 104 / 128 bit codes. This tool may not work on every router as the algorithm is not a standard but I have tried it now on 3 different routers and it hasn't failed me yet. If you are a traveler it is an absolute necessity to have this tool!