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IP Blockers and how they work?Options
05-01-2011 06:23 PM So, I'm looking for more information about ip blockers and how they work. Can someone go into a little more detail for me? Very basic from my point of view. I want to block my ip address when I'm downloading p2p stuff. Re: IP Blockers and how they work?Options
05-09-2011 05:41 AM I assume you're downloading only totally legal software you paid for and are in no way procuring illegal software in illegal fashions.
You don't block your IP, you use a program that gives a different IP. I can't point you there. I may get banned for this much, but look up IP Spoofing instead of blocking. ![]() Re: IP Blockers and how they work?Options
05-09-2011 12:52 PM
I know there are some programs that will block the IP addresses of certain government agencies and private watchdog firms from connecting to your computer. Theoretically, they will prevent those unsavory characters being able to snoop in on your dealings, but I don't know how well that actually works.
Re: IP Blockers and how they work?[ Edited ]Options
10-13-2011 05:46 AM - edited 10-13-2011 05:48 AM IP blockers help in banning the ip of spammers as spammers are day by day increasing and polluting the web. IT helps a lot in protecting your website from spammers.
Re: IP Blockers and how they work?[ Edited ]Options
10-14-2011 02:07 AM - edited 10-14-2011 02:08 AM You can't make your IP disappear, otherwise traffic would have no idea how to reach you.
One kind of IP blocker uses a blacklist to specify ranges of IP addresses that your computer simply won't respond to. PeerGuardian et al operate this way, as their blacklists claim to block networks from government, corporations, etc, that might be hostile to file sharing. They are far from perfect, though, and frankly if I owned an anti-piracy firm I could think of a couple different ways to stay off those lists.
You could also route your traffic through a proxy server. This "blocks" your IP by allowing the proxy server to send and receive data on your behalf, which then forwards it to you. Your IP address becomes the IP address of the proxy server. This is how I fool online stores like Steam into letting me pay in USD, not EUR -- I use SSH's SOCKS feature and forward all my traffic through my webhost, whose datacenter is in the US.
You could erase the return address from individual IP packets (this would most definitely "block" your IP), but this essentially means you can only communicate one-way and most networking requires two-way communication for handshaking at the least. All that is of course contingent on whether your packets will even route, as I have heard that backbone providers drop packets without return addresses.
Also, to the previous posters: is it really necessary to get your piracy panties bunched up over this? Nowhere was piracy even mentioned and the interest might be purely intellectual (or not, but who cares).
Re: IP Blockers and how they work?Options
10-14-2011 10:30 AM Dark, your Steam changes from USD to EUR overseas? I first registered my Steam account in 2006 here in Spain and from the very beginning all of my prices and games treated me like I was in the United States regardless of whether or not I use my VPN. I had Steam on a laptop when I visited Tunisia a few years ago and the prices didn't change nor did any games become region locked. However, some of my American and Canadian friends got that problem. I'm curious (and thankful) that I'm somehow locked into a U.S. account.
Re: IP Blockers and how they work?[ Edited ]Options
10-17-2011 02:48 AM - edited 10-17-2011 02:49 AM Whenever I log in without the proxy, the Steam store shows prices in EUR :-/
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