The drawback is that evildoers can still attack the WPA2 handshakes and can force devices to downgrade, so you’re still getting effectively WPA2 level security until you actually turn off WPA2.
But if it doesn’t cost you anything, you can just turn it on and make their life just s little bit harder.
The drawback is that evildoers can still attack the WPA2 handshakes and can force devices to downgrade, so you’re still getting effectively WPA2 level security until you actually turn off WPA2.
But if it doesn’t cost you anything, you can just turn it on and make their life just s little bit harder.
Maybe vlan or DMZ a wpa2 network and use wpa3 with no fallback to wpa2 on the main/lan network?
In my case that would mean that over 70% would be in the DMZ… It would be the main network
Yeah but as long as important data is not able to be accessed via the wpa2 network then you are all good.