A family member just moved into an apartment in an older row home. I purchased a modem and Asus router for him, and he connected it up and it didn't work. When I went over to troubleshoot, the landlord had an Ethernet cable running into his apartment, and my son had that connected to the modem.
When I saw that it was an Ethernet cable, not an ISP cable connection, I just connected it directly to the Asus router and it worked perfectly. Since the landlord offers "internet connectivity" at a low price point to all three apartments in this house, I'll guess that they have a cable inbound from an ISP, connected to their router, and 3 Ethernet cables that run to each of the three apartments in the house.
With WPA2 security set on the router, and a strong router password, it's likely that his wireless is fairly well secured. But what about the Ethernet connection back to the shared modem behind the router? What security risk is there at that level in the network. If there is risk, how can we mitigate that risk?
Thanks in advance for your help!
-bjk
When I saw that it was an Ethernet cable, not an ISP cable connection, I just connected it directly to the Asus router and it worked perfectly. Since the landlord offers "internet connectivity" at a low price point to all three apartments in this house, I'll guess that they have a cable inbound from an ISP, connected to their router, and 3 Ethernet cables that run to each of the three apartments in the house.
With WPA2 security set on the router, and a strong router password, it's likely that his wireless is fairly well secured. But what about the Ethernet connection back to the shared modem behind the router? What security risk is there at that level in the network. If there is risk, how can we mitigate that risk?
Thanks in advance for your help!
-bjk