It's known to be hacked but requires a lot of resources. It can be hacked but not easily.
A guide to crack WPA can be found online on various forums that specialize in electronics. However, WPA is extremely secure and you will not be able to crack it.
One can learn to crack WPA adresses by going to a local computer store and seeing if the people working there can help you with your matter depending on your reasons.
Use security settings for your wireless network, such as SSID hiding, and wireless encryption. It's better if you use WPA AES at least, but WPA-PSK2 AES is better. You can use also MAC filter. But if you have WPA-PSK2 AES you do not need to because it's almost impossible to crack the encryption.
WEP, WPA, WPA2, etc, are just encryption protocols.WEP is by far the easiest for hackers to break literally in seconds to minutes. WPA is much better but is slowly getting easier to crack, WPA2 Personal is the best you can use now for the consumer. Some fairly older wireless devices may not support WPA2 tho. At the very least use WPA with a long random password if you can't use WPA2.
I would suggest WPA-PSK. Several organizations have recently demonstrated how to crack WEP keys in under an hour, and in the case of the FBI, as little as three minutes. WPA-PSK is a much more secure technology.
WPA stands for Public Works Administration
No the WPA does not still exist. As it states on Wikipedia, the WPA was closed down by Congress and the war boom in 1943.
WPA stands for Works Progress Administration.
Nothing. The WPA was not created until 1935
WPA key is a password for your wifi connection it's to help you be secure.
Employment through the WPA is an act of desperation
These 2 services are the WPA supplicant for the D-Link wireless utility. They are integrated in the D-Link utility to give you WPA/WPA-PSK support