I only noticed this through pure luck, when trying to get a local network user to browse to my PC;
Adium .80 seems to kindly convert my local IP address (192.168.0.15) to my routers real world ip address (82.217.x.x).
How is it possible to stop it doing this.
1) I see it as a security issue (as it doesn't tell me its changed it)
2) It makes sending local links impossible.
3) It... well, it scares me, OK?
WIth thanks,
MidnighToker
it shows my realworld IP!
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MidnighToker
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MidnighToker
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damn micro$oft
well this was over MSN.
Hold on, i'll do some investigating.
well i'll be...
It is MSN.
Type in 192.168.0.10 (laptops IP Address, Windows XP running Trillian) and it kindly replaces it with my external IP.
The shocking thing, is that it half makes sense, and would stop conversations like the follwing
"OK Stephen, so whats your IP that you want me to VNC to, then?"
"Its 192.168.0.5..."
"For G-d's sake man, you're half way through your CCNP....."
but its still.... worrying.
Dont suppose anyone's got any thoughts on this?
Hold on, i'll do some investigating.
well i'll be...
It is MSN.
Type in 192.168.0.10 (laptops IP Address, Windows XP running Trillian) and it kindly replaces it with my external IP.
The shocking thing, is that it half makes sense, and would stop conversations like the follwing
"OK Stephen, so whats your IP that you want me to VNC to, then?"
"Its 192.168.0.5..."
"For G-d's sake man, you're half way through your CCNP....."
but its still.... worrying.
Dont suppose anyone's got any thoughts on this?
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Son of a Preacher Man
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- Contact:
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MidnighToker
- Harmless
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Wed May 04, 2005 12:24 am
- Location: Wakefield, UK
- Contact:
encryption
ok, so the interesting thing was this.
in tests conducted earlier with a friend of mine (on a seperate network, both using Adinum both MSN) we had all of our messages encrypted.
So, the question i have to ask, is how did it replace them.
If encryption happens in Adinum, then the message should be sent through MSN as encrypted data, so the MSN protocall cant read the message and make the IP Swap.
Any thoughts?
in tests conducted earlier with a friend of mine (on a seperate network, both using Adinum both MSN) we had all of our messages encrypted.
So, the question i have to ask, is how did it replace them.
If encryption happens in Adinum, then the message should be sent through MSN as encrypted data, so the MSN protocall cant read the message and make the IP Swap.
Any thoughts?
Re: encryption
I am unable to reproduce this with MSN & Adium.
Re: encryption
Then it's not MSN doing it—it's the local client doing it before you send the message, going out like "whatismyip.com" does and finding your external address, piping it back in and sending it off in your encrypted message.MidnighToker wrote:ok, so the interesting thing was this.
in tests conducted earlier with a friend of mine (on a seperate network, both using Adinum both MSN) we had all of our messages encrypted.
So, the question i have to ask, is how did it replace them.
If encryption happens in Adinum, then the message should be sent through MSN as encrypted data, so the MSN protocall cant read the message and make the IP Swap.
Any thoughts?
Not that I'd really have any clue—I hate MSN and have no reason to use it, so I don't. I'm just guessing, and that seems the most likely.
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