

- #Use a mac sniffer for virgin media broadband tv#
- #Use a mac sniffer for virgin media broadband download#
I’ve called BT so many times like more than 15 and they say it’s fine their end but yet every device I have has been modified. Not that we’re going to reuse the gear themselves more that they would recycle it.īE (before they were brought out by o2) would send you out a “cat trap” modem on the condition you returned it if you left (so they could give it to ant or customer as a cat trap) but didn’t really give a crap about the primary modem.So my walls are thin enough for me to know my neighbours have hacked me. One day I was in a pissy mood after another treat, drove down to the regional head office (at the time it was about 4 miles away) slapped them down on the receptionists desk with the threat letter and demanded a receipt.īT do the same these days with their hubs (or at least were planning to, dunno if they changed their minds after the backlash), BTs excuse is to reduce electronics waste.
#Use a mac sniffer for virgin media broadband tv#
Atleast with ADSL/VDSL in the UK you are free to use what ever device you wanted (except for Sky, they used to be PITAs about getting the auth details to run your own modem, but once you did and aslong as your modem supported their auth (which isn't the auth used by most of the xDSL providers in the UK) you were free to use your own equipment, just "unsupported" so if you had issues on your line, it was best to connect their modem to the line before calling customer services.īack in the day they never bothered chasing up the modems even though they had wording in the contract they could charge if the equipment wasn’t returned, the equipment was never given to the customer but loaned for “free”, they were more pissy about their TV boxes, when I left them they kept sending threats to charging me for the boxes, I kept asking them to either collect them or send me pre-paid postage and I would send them back (was always “well mail one out” and they never did). Here in the UK, we have always been limited to the modem the cable company provided, which remained their property (both were often uncollected by the company when a customer left, so you could easily find old modems on ebay for pennies on the pound, which just happened to have thier unsigned firmware (and mac addresses) on SPI flash if you wished to tinker with them), which for 99% of the UK was fine, as it was common (and still is) to just used what ever device was issued to you. IIRC: Modem cloning is still possible today, but you need to get the certs from a provisioned modem, so its not as simple as just sniffing mac address from the cable line as other modems register on the network).
#Use a mac sniffer for virgin media broadband download#
So there used to be mac swapping forums where X would scan and log their area can trade with Y who would to the same in theirs (used to be handy when they had "fair usage" trottling enabled, used your download limit for the day, swap your mac and get a new limit, or if you wanted to run a 2nd/3rd/4th modem, but that would be naughty. For the longest time (since creation till only a few years ago) you were able to get free internet if you cloned the mac address of someone elses modem but used it in a differnt area, mac addresses that could be captured by any modem (provisioned or not) connected to the network.

Their modem secuirty has never been "great". NTL never had such a policy iirc, but I only lived in an NTL area for a couple of years). Neither NTL nor Telewest allow consumer owned equipment onto their cable internet network, heck I remember Telewest only authing one consumer device mac address to be connected to their modems at the start of their cable internet rollout (so if you wanted to use your own router conencted to the modem, you would either have to give Telewest the mac address of the router or set the mac address of the WAN port to the mac address of the computer that was initially conencted to their network (which was the quickest option, you could never get them to swap it instantly over the phone, but could doing business hours over telewests newsgroups as their engineers would hang out their, which used to be the quickest way to get your line serviced if their was ever an issue), a practice telewest did drop before they merged with NTL.

Virgin Media are now owned by a US conpany, Liberty Global iirc) Long story short, their was tons of regional providers, they were brought up by one of two players which basically devided the country into being served by either NTL or Telewest, NTL and Telewest then merged becoming NTL:Telewest, who then brought Virgin Mobile (an MVNO in the UK) to become a 4 way provider (TV, Phone, Internet and now Mobile). In the UK, Virgin Media (The biggest cable provider, I think there maybe a couple of minor regional cable providers still dotted around the country) are the largest cable provider after buying up the smaller regional companies (My regional provider was brought up by Telewest).
