Appendix B: Wireless Technology
135
 MVP-5200i Modero® ViewPoint® Touch Panel with Intercom - Instruction Manual
Terminology 
Terminology - Wireless Technology
802.1x IEEE 802.1x is an IEEE standard that is built on the Internet standard EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol). 
802.1x is a standard for passing EAP messages over either a wired or wireless LAN. Additionally, 802.1x is also 
responsible for communicating the method with which APs and wireless users can share and change encryption 
keys. This continuous key change helps resolve any major security vulnerabilities native to WEP.
AES
Short for Advanced Encryption Standard, is a cipher currently approved by the NSA to protect US 
Government documents classified as Top Secret. The AES cipher is the first cipher protecting Top Secret 
information available to the general public. 
CERTIFICATES (CA) A certificate can have many forms, but at the most basic level, a certificate is an identity combined with a public key, 
and then signed by a certification authority. The certificate authority (CA) is a trusted external third party which 
"signs" or validates the certificate. When a certificate has been signed, it gains some cryptographic properties. AMX 
supports the following security certificates within three different formats:
• PEM (Privacy Enhanced Mail)
• DER (Distinguished Encoding Rules)
• PKCS12 (Public Key Cryptography Standard #12)
Typical certificate information can include the following items:
• Certificate Issue Date
•Extensions
•Issuer
•Public Key
• Serial Number
•Signature Algorithm
•User
•Version
MIC Short for Message Integrity Check, this prevents forged packets from being sent. Through WEP, it was possible to 
alter a packet whose content was known even if it had not been decrypted. 
TKIP Short for Temporal Key Integration, this is part of the IEEE 802.11i encryption standard for wireless LANs. TKIP 
provides a per-packet key mixing, message integrity check and re-keying mechanism, thus ensuring that every data 
packet is sent with its own unique encryption key. Key mixing increases the complexity of decoding the keys by 
giving the hacker much less data that has been encrypted using any one key.
WEP Short for Wired Equivalent Privacy, WEP is a scheme used to secure wireless networks (Wi-Fi). A wireless network 
broadcasts messages using radio which are particularly susceptible to hacker attacks. WEP was intended to provide 
the confidentiality and security comparable to that of a traditional wired network. As a result of identified 
weaknesses in this scheme, WEP was superseded by Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA), and then by the full IEEE 
802.11i standard (also known as WPA2). 
WPA Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA and WPA2) is a class of system used to secure wireless (Wi-Fi) computer networks. It 
was created in response to several serious weaknesses researchers had found in the previous WEP system. WPA 
implements the majority of the IEEE 802.11i standard, and was intended as an intermediate measure to take the 
place of WEP while 802.11i was prepared (WPA2). WPA is designed to work with all wireless network interface cards, 
but not necessarily with first generation Access Points. To resolve problems with WEP, the Wi-Fi Alliance released 
WPA (FIG. 89), which integrated 802.1x, TKIP and MIC. Within the WPA specifications, the RC4 cipher engine was 
maintained from WEP. RC4 is widely used in SSL (Secure Socket Layer) to protect internet traffic.