 darthboy
join:2007-12-31 Canada | reply to JDErickson Re: Is this an attack
are you running VMware/VPC or any virtualization software? |
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 darthboy
join:2007-12-31 Canada
| »standards.ieee.org/cgi-bin/ouise···00-0D-3A
I did a search for that MAC address. The MAC address is registered to Microsoft. You sure you not running Virtual PC/Server? |
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 JDErickson
join:2008-01-26 West Jordan, UT
·Comcast
| No.
I checked my Logs today and nothing out of the ordinary. |
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 gregandrene
join:2005-01-23 Marion, VA
| reply to darthboy N00b question: how do you register MAC addresses? Aren't they hardwired in the NIC? |
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  Anav Sarcastic Llama? Naw, Just Acerbic Premium join:2001-07-16 Dartmouth, NS
edit: February 20th, @10:38AM
| No good reason to turn essid off and it may cause you reconnecting issues. Best to leave it off. Mac filtering has no possible negative effects, thus can be left in place although security wise its not very effective. (curious if you remove mac filtering what happens ref the logging), |
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  Thane_Bitter
join:2005-01-20 London, ON
| reply to gregandrene said by gregandrene :N00b question: how do you register MAC addresses? Aren't they hardwired in the NIC? The IEEE assigns MAC addresses to hardware makers (actually large blocks of addresses), you can use a tool on their site to see who made the device.
»standards.ieee.org/regauth/oui/index.shtml Use the "Search the public OUI listing" box and enter the fist 6 hex digits of the MAC address. -- ...A bitter ray of sunshine |
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 Da_Penguin
join:2008-04-20
| It's also quite trivial to spoof a MAC (windows will actually check the registry for a MAC address of the network card, before using the card's built in one so its just a registry key change)
but as it has been said earlier it this thread, since it is only Deny's showing, i wouldn't be concerned. |
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