Last time I went on vacation, the hotel wifi wouldn’t let my laptop on for some reason, but my phone was fine. The portal to log in just wouldn’t come up on my laptop.
So I took my phone off the wifi and just spoofed my phone’s MAC address on the laptop. Did that for the whole week I was there.
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What was incredibly strange about my situation was that it was initially a DNS problem, it couldn’t resolve the addresses tha tthe hotel wifi wanted it to get to for the portal. I double checked, and basic DNS queries were working, just not those ones.
So I figured, I’ll go on my phone, grab the IP addresses it’s connecting to, stick those in my hosts file, and they’ll get resolved. Well, this worked for the first portal address, but the one it redirected to couldn’t be reached. Nothing I tried worked, so I had to do what I described above.
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I did this once to get on Xbox live cause the Xbox doesn’t (or didn’t, idk I’m PC now) open the web portal for you to agree to.
So I just changed my hardware address to my laptop’s after I went through the portal in a web browser.
No problems. That was the moment I knew I wanted to be a network engineer. The fact that it worked was just so damn cool.
If you’ve got a VPN running, it won’t work. Turned it off and the prompt came right up
Nah, I don’t typically run a VPN.
I just spent a whole week trying to prevent mac spoofing on my small wisp network network… Still trying…
Please don’t block Boeing or other funny MAC Adress prefixes. Why wouldn’t you believe a 747 was using your network?
You are the worst kind of person
Just trying to live up the villain dream…
I’ll probably forget to check when I get home. Does anyone know if Android randomizes the MAC address on every disconnect/connect with the random MAC option enabled?