Secure your wireless network with Windows Live OneCare 2.0

Today, quite a few households have wireless networks that are unsecure - wide open for anyone to connect to. This could be a huge problem especially if PC's in that home are sharing important family files - like photos and documents - that shouldn't be seen by strangers. In Windows Live OneCare 2.0, a new feature is coming that will let users of Windows Live OneCare secure an unsecure wireless network in their home. I decided to give this new feature a try and share my experience.

Once I connected to the unsecure wireless network, I launched Windows Live OneCare and was alerted by Windows Live OneCare that I was on an unsecure wireless network and that it can help me to secure it.  I clicked "Turn-on" and started the process. Here is a video demo of me going through the process of securing an unsecure wireless network:


Video: Demo: OneCare Wireless Security

I'd like to take a few moments to elaborate on a few things from the video. First off: the router I used to test this was *not* connected to the Internet. Most users who will use this feature to secure their router will have it connected to the Internet. Once going through the wizard to secure the router with Windows Live OneCare - the user and any other PC's on the home network should be able to access the Internet just fine. There will be no issue securing a router connected to a WAN (WAN being your ISP for Internet access).

To secure your wireless network - you are required to connect via cable (Cat-5) - which is why I needed a Cat-5 cable in my video to proceed with the process of securing my router. This is important as this prevents anyone from connecting to your network wirelessly and using Windows Live OneCare to wipe your wireless networking settings with their own settings. This is what the OneCare Team calls the "proof of ownership" check.

In securing your router - it does not completely wipe out all your settings. The settings that Windows Live OneCare changes during the securing process are the SSID, enabling of WEP security, & setting of the WEP key. After Windows Live OneCare secures your router, you are given instructions on how to set up other PC's on your home network with the new settings Windows Live OneCare enabled on your router.

This is looking to be a very useful and interesting feature for home users who are unfamiliar (and maybe uncomfortable) getting onto their router and configuring it for secure wireless capabilities.

There is a wiki setup over on Channel 9 with informaton on this feature of Windows Live OneCare 2.0 worth checking out as well.


Comments

  1. Posted on: October 16, 2007 at 12:42AM  

    With all the different routers and firmware variants, it seems doomed to failure.

    There is probably going to be too much of the "works for everyone but you syndrome" to be truely effective.

    There is so much to go wrong, I am betting this feature gets culled never to return before the final release.

  2. Posted on: October 16, 2007 at 2:03AM  

    Yeah I can see this feature possibly not working all that well in practice, somehow end users can mess up things in ways IT professionals can't even imagine.

    However I applaud the effort, hopefully it will bear fruit and get home users more comfortable with networking.  Most of the problem calls I've had from my in laws regarding computers this year have been related to Networking, usually its the simple "whats our wireless network password" or something along those lines but sometimes its more complex. Anything that makes this easier for people should be worked upon until perfected.

    Sure its hard with all the different router and firmware variants, however every user of the internet deserves a secure internet connection.

  3. Posted on: October 16, 2007 at 2:48AM  

    Wait, wait... So you fix the "insecure wireless" problem via OneCare by making the wireless network *more* insecure? How does that make sense?

    WEP is easily crackable, within minutes (sometimes under one minute). It should not be used. It's more insecure than no key because people assume they have a secure network and do things they wouldn't do on an otherwise insecure one.

  4. Posted on: October 16, 2007 at 2:53AM  

    Rosyna, it may be true WEP can be easily "cracked" but its certainly not "more" insecure than having an open wireless network that anyone can access (like my next door neighbors).

    I'd rather folks have at least some protection rathar than none for their wireless network in their home.

    - Brandon

  5. Posted on: October 16, 2007 at 8:57AM  

    I don't understand why WPA or WPA2 has not been used? It's far more secure than WEP, and is standard on most routers these days.

  6. Posted on: October 16, 2007 at 9:13PM  

    gman1981, According to the liberal devil page that is wikipedia, as of March 13, 2006, WPA2 certification is mandatory for all new devices wishing to be Wi-Fi certified.

    So you cannot buy a device today that is Wi-Fi certified but does not support WPA2. Which makes your assertion about it being standard on routers correct.

  7. Posted on: October 25, 2007 at 8:10AM  
  8. Posted on: October 06, 2009 at 7:56AM  

    windows live safely in our computer program, these issues have a lot of work in the microsoft windows live hope for a more secure