"It keeps the environment sandboxed to keep the physical hardware from
being damaged by malicious files/packets/scripts."

.. since scripts these days can physically damage hardware? Almost looks
like he's copy pasting a bad bofh, fun still..

2018-04-25 16:41 GMT+02:00 Stealth Mode <[email protected]>:

> Last message for the kids.
>
> Do you know what a field programmable gate array is? Because you refer to
> them as CPU/gpu. Do you know what f.p.g.a., and e.e.p.r.o.m., and p.r.o.m.
> are? Those are the 4 bit through 64 bit programmable logic controllers that
> every "computer" ever made uses to have a "machine/pc". Including the 16
> bit hexidecimal/machine assembly language utilizing logic controller that
> stores Mac addresses known as the U.A.R.T. chip in your network interface
> card/onboard lan/wifi adapters.
>
> Some of us can go below the hardware layer. We don't ban by IP addressing.
> That was the point of the previous topic. Cause anyone can walk under the
> hardware layer without detection, and without being able to be
> seen/tracked/banned. The point was to ban by Mac address because most of
> the script kiddies, and amateurs. Those who aren't trained in electronics,
> and especially binary logic controller programming. Will never be able to
> connect to your go server to run malicious scripts.
>
> That was the point. Have a nice day. A large number of people from the
> previous topic are now blocked permanently from any type of communication
> to my dmz.
>
> Furthermore. The suggestion to run your servers through a VMware/virtual
> machine is always a good idea. It keeps the environment sandboxed to keep
> the physical hardware from being damaged by malicious files/packets/scripts.
>
> End of Discussion.
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 25, 2018, 08:41 Stealth Mode <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> The Internet Protocol address is assigned by the operating system
>> contacting the network administration device which is normally a switch,
>> router, or hub. It checks these devices for a free Internet Protocol
>> address. And the packets the network sends has a footer and a header with
>> this IP addressing.
>>
>> Once you have this IP address you can then pulse the dmz of the router
>> and pull it's network allocation table. Once this is done you have every
>> Mac address on the network.
>>
>> However, with just a pkt sniffer you can go directly to someone's is and
>> pull their Mac address right out of the network interface cards read only
>> memory which is stored under the device table for the operating system
>> which is connected to the internet Protocol address you are using.
>>
>> Literally, a phone line can be tapped with 0 and 1 about a 1,000-10,000
>> taps. And your machine will randomly shut off.
>>
>> On Tue, Apr 24, 2018, 12:55 Jack Emerson <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Your public IP address is assigned by your ISP independent of your
>>> hardware. Are you mad?
>>>
>>> Why am I even replying...I'm part of the problem.
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Csgo_servers mailing list
>>> [email protected]
>>> https://list.valvesoftware.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/csgo_servers
>>
>>
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