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Wifi Device Spoofing
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Wifi Device SpoofingPosted:
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So my parents recently purchased some stupid router that can disable any device from access the network. So I was wondering if there was a way to spoof my MacBook or anything else and reconnect. Maybe if the device showed a different identity and how to change that. I'm just trying to reconnect with the same device after being disconnected.
#2. Posted:
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Wait I'm confused..
Sounds like they blocked your MAC address?
Sounds like they blocked your MAC address?
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HTTK wrote Wait I'm confused..
Sounds like they blocked your MAC address?
Yes. How would I go about changing that on a MacBook pro?
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HTTK wrote Wait I'm confused..
Sounds like they blocked your MAC address?
Yes. How would I go about changing that on a MacBook pro?
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-Shyko wroteHTTK wrote Wait I'm confused..
Sounds like they blocked your MAC address?
Yes. How would I go about changing that on a MacBook pro?
You could change it on your router.
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@HTTK you can't change a devices MAC address on a router. You can however run terminal and change it. a MAC address looks like this aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff but with numbers also. To find your current mac address type ifconfig en1 | grep ether and it will come out with your mac address after "ether" like "ether aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff". You probably want to write it down or you can just reboot to reset the mac address to the original. Remember that after you reboot you'll have to spoof the address again. To find other mac addresses you'll need to log into your routers ui (192.168.1.1 or 192.168.0.1) are the two usual ones. To do the spoofing you type "sudo ifconfig en1 ether NEWMACADDRESSHERE" and then enter the root password. There you go, you've spoofed your MAC address.
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Xex-Jakee wrote @HTTK you can't change a devices MAC address on a router. You can however run terminal and change it. a MAC address looks like this aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff but with numbers also. To find your current mac address type ifconfig en1 | grep ether and it will come out with your mac address after "ether" like "ether aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff". You probably want to write it down or you can just reboot to reset the mac address to the original. Remember that after you reboot you'll have to spoof the address again. To find other mac addresses you'll need to log into your routers ui (192.168.1.1 or 192.168.0.1) are the two usual ones. To do the spoofing you type "sudo ifconfig en1 ether NEWMACADDRESSHERE" and then enter the root password. There you go, you've spoofed your MAC address.
Not at all what I meant.
I meant remove the block.
He can go into his router and disable it.
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HTTK wroteXex-Jakee wrote @HTTK you can't change a devices MAC address on a router. You can however run terminal and change it. a MAC address looks like this aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff but with numbers also. To find your current mac address type ifconfig en1 | grep ether and it will come out with your mac address after "ether" like "ether aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff". You probably want to write it down or you can just reboot to reset the mac address to the original. Remember that after you reboot you'll have to spoof the address again. To find other mac addresses you'll need to log into your routers ui (192.168.1.1 or 192.168.0.1) are the two usual ones. To do the spoofing you type "sudo ifconfig en1 ether NEWMACADDRESSHERE" and then enter the root password. There you go, you've spoofed your MAC address.
Not at all what I meant.
I meant remove the block.
He can go into his router and disable it.
Not if his parents change the password from the default one, then he's f*cked either way.
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Xex-Jakee wroteHTTK wroteXex-Jakee wrote @HTTK you can't change a devices MAC address on a router. You can however run terminal and change it. a MAC address looks like this aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff but with numbers also. To find your current mac address type ifconfig en1 | grep ether and it will come out with your mac address after "ether" like "ether aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff". You probably want to write it down or you can just reboot to reset the mac address to the original. Remember that after you reboot you'll have to spoof the address again. To find other mac addresses you'll need to log into your routers ui (192.168.1.1 or 192.168.0.1) are the two usual ones. To do the spoofing you type "sudo ifconfig en1 ether NEWMACADDRESSHERE" and then enter the root password. There you go, you've spoofed your MAC address.
Not at all what I meant.
I meant remove the block.
He can go into his router and disable it.
Not if his parents change the password from the default one, then he's f*cked either way.
Sounds like they didn't mean to do it though.
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#10. Posted:
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Xex-Jakee wrote @HTTK you can't change a devices MAC address on a router. You can however run terminal and change it. a MAC address looks like this aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff but with numbers also. To find your current mac address type ifconfig en1 | grep ether and it will come out with your mac address after "ether" like "ether aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff". You probably want to write it down or you can just reboot to reset the mac address to the original. Remember that after you reboot you'll have to spoof the address again. To find other mac addresses you'll need to log into your routers ui (192.168.1.1 or 192.168.0.1) are the two usual ones. To do the spoofing you type "sudo ifconfig en1 ether NEWMACADDRESSHERE" and then enter the root password. There you go, you've spoofed your MAC address.
How would I pull up the terminal?
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