The default WEP key is a 10-digit number below the barcode on the bottom of your 2Wire router.
0741670603
Assuming you have a real 2Wire, Inc. wireless gateway/router, and you are still using your factory default WEP key, it is printed on the bottom of the router. It is a 10-digit number and that is what you would enter into your Nintendo DS to get it on the Internet.
Break in the house where the 2wire is located, write down the WEP key on the modem, PRESTO! Free internet...
That doesn't technically make sense - a WEP key is the password used to access an encrypted (one form of encryption at least) router. If you don't have a router, it makes no sense to ask for a WEP key - a WEP key to access what? It's like a key with no lock, the WEP key is for a router.So if there's no router, there's no point wanting a WEP key. If there is a router and you don't know the WEP key, then clearly it's someone else's router, and the encryption is precisely to stop unauthorised people using it.
No. Your WEP key is the password placed on the router you are trying to access.
Check your wireless router's documentation on how to find its WEP key. Assumedly your PC/laptop also connect to your router, so they should have the WEP key already or else they couldn't connect.
No The WEP key is the key used to encrypt the wireless traffic, so people can't sniff the data and see what your doing. No WEP key, no connect to the network. No router password, and you can't log into the router to modify the WEP key.
well, my friend. Everybody has there own different WEP key
You set up the WEP key when you set up your wireless router.
A WEP Key is different on each router. No router will have the same. To find out what yours is, consult your user manual, or look at the bottom of your router, some have it printed there.
The WEP key is the encryption code needed to access a wireless router.