DHCP server

DHCP server

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Subject Author Date
DHCP server Nomen Nescio 08-04-2008
| `--> Re: DHCP server Ansgar -59cobal...08-04-2008
Posted by Nomen Nescio on August 4, 2008, 11:20 am
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Being in China for the Olympics, I have found a way where my
Intenret activities cannot be detected, analysed, monitored,
cracked, or sniffed. I set up my own DHCP server elsewhere.

This is an Australian radio station, with the servers at a
colocation facility in California. I simply installed a DHCP
program on the server, and made it open to any machine in the
world.

I just simply change the network settings to use my machine
as the gateway machine. When I boot up, it goes to my
server, and fetches an IP from the pool of a available IPs
by my ISP. So I assume a U.S. IP address, even though I am
in China. Because my server acts as the gateway machine to
the server, instead of local servers, in China, my activities
are INVISIBLE to the Chinese authorities, so I can use Skype
to take calls on my online talk show, or surf some western
news sites that are blocked by the Chinese authorites, and
they will NEVER see it. Because my server acts as the
gateway machine, and assigning and releasing an IP to
the machine here in China, what I see and do is TOTALLY
*INVISIBLE* to the Chinese authorites, and WITHOUT having
to use encryption software, such as VPN (some programs I
have barf on the VPN tunnel).

I got the idea from a guy I was chatting with in Holland,
who does a similar thing at work. He found an open DHCP
server in Thailand, and simply changed the settings on his
work PC, so that the open DHCP server in Holland assigns
his work PC and IP, and acts as the gateway machine, and
effectively makes his surfing INVISIBLE to the network
admins. Becuase the open DHCP he found in Thailand acts
as the Internet gateway, there is NOTHING logged at the
workplace. Where is goes is only known to him, and whoever
is running that open DHCP server in Thailand. All the
logging, if any, is being done by the machine running the
open DHCP server.

All it takes is to go to network settings, and change the
configuration for the gateway machine to the open DHCP
server, and to change the DNS servers to the DNS servers
of that machine's ISP. Then you just simply re-boot the
machine, and you are good to go.




Posted by Erik Dahle on August 4, 2008, 12:19 pm
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Nomen Nescio wrote:
> Being in China for the Olympics, I have found a way where my
> Intenret activities cannot be detected, analysed, monitored,
> cracked, or sniffed. I set up my own DHCP server elsewhere.
>
> This is an Australian radio station, with the servers at a
> colocation facility in California. I simply installed a DHCP
> program on the server, and made it open to any machine in the
> world.
>
> I just simply change the network settings to use my machine
> as the gateway machine. When I boot up, it goes to my
> server, and fetches an IP from the pool of a available IPs
> by my ISP. So I assume a U.S. IP address, even though I am
> in China. Because my server acts as the gateway machine to
> the server, instead of local servers, in China, my activities
> are INVISIBLE to the Chinese authorities, so I can use Skype
> to take calls on my online talk show, or surf some western
> news sites that are blocked by the Chinese authorites, and
> they will NEVER see it. Because my server acts as the
> gateway machine, and assigning and releasing an IP to
> the machine here in China, what I see and do is TOTALLY
> *INVISIBLE* to the Chinese authorites, and WITHOUT having
> to use encryption software, such as VPN (some programs I
> have barf on the VPN tunnel).
>
> I got the idea from a guy I was chatting with in Holland,
> who does a similar thing at work. He found an open DHCP
> server in Thailand, and simply changed the settings on his
> work PC, so that the open DHCP server in Holland assigns
> his work PC and IP, and acts as the gateway machine, and
> effectively makes his surfing INVISIBLE to the network
> admins. Becuase the open DHCP he found in Thailand acts
> as the Internet gateway, there is NOTHING logged at the
> workplace. Where is goes is only known to him, and whoever
> is running that open DHCP server in Thailand. All the
> logging, if any, is being done by the machine running the
> open DHCP server.
>
> All it takes is to go to network settings, and change the
> configuration for the gateway machine to the open DHCP
> server, and to change the DNS servers to the DNS servers
> of that machine's ISP. Then you just simply re-boot the
> machine, and you are good to go.
>

Impressive.
I bet the bandwidth and latency you got equals your server in the U.S as
well?

Erik

Posted by Ansgar -59cobalt- Wiechers on August 4, 2008, 1:16 pm
If you were  Registered and logged in, you could reply and use other advanced thread options
> Chilly spouted:

[ the usual brainless nonsens ]

> Impressive.
> I bet the bandwidth and latency you got equals your server in the U.S
> as well?

Don't feed the troll. Thank you.

cu
59cobalt
--
"If a software developer ever believes a rootkit is a necessary part of
their architecture they should go back and re-architect their solution."
--Mark Russinovich

Posted by mak on August 5, 2008, 6:09 am
If you were  Registered and logged in, you could reply and use other advanced thread options
Nomen Nescio wrote:
> Being in China for the Olympics, I have found a way where my
> Intenret activities cannot be detected, analysed, monitored,
> cracked, or sniffed. I set up my own DHCP server elsewhere.
>
> This is an Australian radio station, with the servers at a
> colocation facility in California. I simply installed a DHCP
> program on the server, and made it open to any machine in the
> world.
>
> I just simply change the network settings to use my machine
> as the gateway machine. When I boot up, it goes to my
> server, and fetches an IP from the pool of a available IPs
> by my ISP. So I assume a U.S. IP address, even though I am
> in China. Because my server acts as the gateway machine to
> the server, instead of local servers, in China, my activities
> are INVISIBLE to the Chinese authorities, so I can use Skype
> to take calls on my online talk show, or surf some western
> news sites that are blocked by the Chinese authorites, and
> they will NEVER see it. Because my server acts as the
> gateway machine, and assigning and releasing an IP to
> the machine here in China, what I see and do is TOTALLY
> *INVISIBLE* to the Chinese authorites, and WITHOUT having
> to use encryption software, such as VPN (some programs I
> have barf on the VPN tunnel).
>
> I got the idea from a guy I was chatting with in Holland,
> who does a similar thing at work. He found an open DHCP
> server in Thailand, and simply changed the settings on his
> work PC, so that the open DHCP server in Holland assigns
> his work PC and IP, and acts as the gateway machine, and
> effectively makes his surfing INVISIBLE to the network
> admins. Becuase the open DHCP he found in Thailand acts
> as the Internet gateway, there is NOTHING logged at the
> workplace. Where is goes is only known to him, and whoever
> is running that open DHCP server in Thailand. All the
> logging, if any, is being done by the machine running the
> open DHCP server.
>
> All it takes is to go to network settings, and change the
> configuration for the gateway machine to the open DHCP
> server, and to change the DNS servers to the DNS servers
> of that machine's ISP. Then you just simply re-boot the
> machine, and you are good to go.
>
>
>
CHILI!!!
you idiot!!!

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