On Thu, 2007-01-25 at 12:36 -0600, Greg Wallace wrote:
On Thursday, January 25, 2007 @ 5:46 AM, Billie Erin Walsh wrote:
James Knott wrote:
That simply doesn't make sense. The purpose of the MAC address is to enable devices to communicate over the local network and nothing
more.
I'm just shooting in the dark here, but....................
When you "clone the MAC Address" what are you actually doing?
I thought I had all of this stuff figured out, but now I'm not so sure. However, that being said, I think that simply means you're taking the mac address of some other device and pretending to be that device. My router has place where I can select this option and, if I do, it opens up a box that has a mac address already in it, which I assume is the mac address of the router. If I wanted to, I could simply key in my computer's mac address and, in effect, pretend to be the computer. If your ISP has only authorized your computer's mac address, this would let the router step in between the computer and the ISP and the ISP wouldn't know the difference, since you have "cloned" the mac address of the computer, which is what the ISP (modem) is expecting. I probably have this all wrong, but I think that's the idea.
Actually you have it entirely correct. -- Ken Schneider UNIX since 1989, linux since 1994, SuSE since 1998 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org