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Manage WiFi Users Securely and with Ease

Written by Greg Keller on July 11, 2019

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Most organizations have moved to wireless networks from the old traditional wired networks.

Wireless is easier to manage, more cost-effective, and more agile.

Users love WiFi. They can work wherever they want in the building or space, there are no cords, and they can always stay connected. But for IT admins, the benefits of implementing WiFi do come with some drawbacks – namely in WiFi access management.

WiFi and Security

WiFi doesn’t have a reputation for being the most secure IT platform. Wireless access points have traditionally been secured through an encrypted connection – either WEP or WPA. Access to the network is controlled through an SSID and passphrase.

Anybody that has the SSID and passphrase is able to connect to the network. In larger offices, common credentials can spread quickly. As users come and go, if the credentials aren’t updated then the network is at risk. Terminated employees and former contractors will still have access.

For tiny organizations this is generally fine. Updates to the passphrase can be easily communicated. But that’s not the case for larger WiFi environments. So what can organizations do to securely improve WiFi access management?

It Starts with Unique User Identities

The two major approaches to managing WiFi users both share a common theme: dramatically increasing the security of the WiFi platform comes from requiring users to connect to the network uniquely.

With unique user credentials, there isn’t a common password that enables access. Each user must have their own username and password. Users can be added and terminated independently from others ensuring that only the users you intend are the ones that can access the network.

LDAP & RADIUS – The Two Approaches to Manage WiFi User

You can manage WiFi users by connecting the wireless network either directly to LDAP or to other directory services via RADIUS.

In both cases, a user’s general credentials are utilized as the entry point. But the processes diverge when it comes to how they connect to the WiFi network.

If the wireless network is connected to LDAP, users will connect to the network via the usual SSID and passphrase. From there a login portal will appear via their browser. The user enters their credentials and they are granted access.

If the wireless network leverages RADIUS to connect to directory services, then the same process is followed except that the individual’s credentials are entered into the RADIUS supplicant once. From then on, the user is automatically granted access. Users must supply unique credentials in order to access the network.

Advantages to RADIUS

The beauty of the second approach is that the IT admin can control and manage access in one place:  the central, authoritative user directory.

ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú’s open directory platform is granting organizations the ability to tightly control WiFi access. IT admins can leverage the ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú RADIUS server endpoint or connect to ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú via their own RADIUS server.

LDAP as a Viable Alternative

If an IT organization would prefer to leverage LDAP, they aren’t out of luck. Hosted LDAP is a core part of the open directory platform. Users can be centrally managed within the ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú platform. From your web browser, the power to control who is granted WiFi access — and who is not — is at your finger tips.

Want Better WiFi Access Management?

If you would like to level up your WiFi access management and security, or check out our pricing options. Our clients tell us it’s an easy way to take the next step in centralizing control over their users and effectively managing access to the IT resources they need.

Greg Keller

ºÚÁϺ£½Ç91Èë¿Ú CTO, Greg Keller is a career product visionary and executive management leader. With over two decades of product management, product marketing, and operations experience ranging from startups to global organizations, Greg excels in successful go-to-market execution.

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