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In every case I have positively confirmed the MAC addresses. I have 13 devices which I have been able to positively identify and which show on both lists.
#Loxone musicserver sonos android#
I've used Fing on my Android phone to list connected devices, and I've logged in to the admin console on the router to list connected devices. I have some data but I'm not sure what to do with it. OK, I've spent the last hour running around the house, switching things on and off, trying to identify all the devices that are connecting to our network. I'd be tempted to disconnect the wired devices and reconnect then one at a time and see if you can replicate the issue - including, those devices that are only occasionally used. It is relatively trivial for a piece of malware to mimic a wifi named wireless network, but allow open connectivity to draw you in, as your wifi rather stupidly broadcasts the name of every SSID it has ever connected to by default just listen in for the signal, create an phantom SSID with a similar name, leave it open and band, you've suckered someone in! The fact that the issue is intermittent would indicate that perhaps the device in question is only intermittently active, which would perhaps indicate it is not your Powerline plugs themselves.Īre any of you wired devices susceptible to malware?.That the neighbours devices are showing up on your wired network indicated, it is a device plugged into your wired network (or connected to a device plugged into your wired network) that is the bridge.The two networks are clearly bridged in some way.
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Repeated until you've added all your devices and found the problem that is causing the network sharing.
#Loxone musicserver sonos Pc#
Using FING from your mobile and Softperfect Netscanner from a PC to then probe the network and ensure only that device is added after each device is powered on to confirm what the router is saying. Do this one at at time, power up, check router if it found that one device or more. Power up the router then one at a time (starting with a device to access the router) turn your individual devices back on, refresh the router to see what its found. Turn off the router for a start to hopefully flush all the cached entries and power off all your devices, everything. It's your security of your home network, you wouldn't leave your door unlock and open to see inside so don't do it on a computer network. Changing the DHCP range is akin to leaving a burglar in your house and changing the locks but they are already inside.
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